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Title: The Boys' Book of Model Aeroplanes: how to build and fly them
Author: Collins, Francis A. (Francis Arnold)
Language: English
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AEROPLANES ***



                  THE BOYS’ BOOK OF MODEL AEROPLANES



[Illustration: Launching the Airship.]



                           THE BOYS’ BOOK OF
                           MODEL AEROPLANES

                         HOW TO BUILD AND FLY
                        THEM: WITH THE STORY OF
                         THE EVOLUTION OF THE
                            FLYING MACHINE

                                  BY
                          FRANCIS A. COLLINS

                         ILLUSTRATED WITH MANY
                       PHOTOGRAPHS AND DIAGRAMS
                             BY THE AUTHOR

                            [Illustration]

                                LONDON
                             EVELEIGH NASH
                                 1912



                                  TO

                         ARNOLD MILLER COLLINS
                             (_Aged Ten_)

                    THAN WHOM NO COLLABORATOR COULD
                      HAVE BEEN MORE ENTHUSIASTIC



CONTENTS


  PART I

  MODELS: HOW TO BUILD AND FLY THEM

  CHAPTER                                         PAGE

     I. THE NEW SPORT FOR BOYS                       3

    II. WHY THE AEROPLANE FLIES                     18

   III. HOW TO BUILD A “GLIDER”                     30

    IV. BUILDING THE MOTOR                          50

     V. FINE POINTS OF CONSTRUCTION                 68

    VI. SIMPLE MONOPLANE MODELS                     84

   VII. ELABORATING THE MONOPLANE                  102

  VIII. BUILDING A BIPLANE                         121

    IX. COMBINING MONOPLANE AND BIPLANE FORMS      137

     X. FAULTS AND HOW TO MEND THEM                143


  PART II

  THE HISTORY AND SCIENCE OF AVIATION

     I. THE FIRST FLYING MACHINES                  163

    II. DEVELOPING THE AEROPLANE                   175

   III. THE WRIGHT BROTHERS’ OWN STORY             193

    IV. ABOARD THE WRIGHTS’ AIRSHIP                224

     V. OTHER AEROPLANES APPEAR                    238

    VI. SUCCESSFUL MONOPLANES                      254

   VII. AERIAL WARFARE                             272

  VIII. SPORTS OF THE AIR, AEROPLANES              293



LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS


                                                        PAGE

  Launching the Airship                        _Frontispiece_

  A Junior Aëroclub with its Instructor in One of the
  New York Public Schools                                  7

  A Young Inventor in His Workshop                        14

  Boys Comparing Models                                   14

  The First Glider Weighted at the Front                  28

  Dowel Strips of Different Sizes                         33

  Plate A--Diagrams of Plan of Aëroplane on Page 58       38

  A Coil of Cane or Reed                                  42

  Splitting a Bamboo Fish-Pole                            47

  Plate B--The Propeller before Cutting Down              51

  Model Constructed from Diagram, Plate A                 58

  Splitting the Segar Box Cover to Build the Propeller    63

  Plate C--The Diagram of a Monoplane                     65

  A Model Aëroplane Built from the Drawing
  (Plate C)                                               71

  Detail of Rudder and Propeller of Model Built from
  Drawing (Plate C)                                       78

  Plate I--A Clever Folding Model. The Wings Are
  Broader than Need Be                                    88

  Plate II--A Model Aëroplane Worth Imitating             93

  Plate III--An Ingenious French Model Made of
  Umbrella Wire                                          100

  Plate IV--One of the Simplest of Aëroplanes to
  Construct                                              105

  Plate V--Too Large for Beginners but Will Make
  Long Flights                                           112

  Model Shown in Plate V Ready for a Flight              117

  Plate VI--A Model with Both Good and Bad
  Features                                               124

  Plate VII--A Good Example of Careful Designing
  and Workmanship                                        129

  Plate VIII--An Effective Model with Wooden
  Wings                                                  136

  Plate IX--An Interesting Experiment Along New
  Lines                                                  139

  Plate X--An Excellent Monoplane Capable of Long
  Flights                                                150

  Detail of Model Shown in Plate X                       153

  Plate XI--Well Thought Out Monoplane                   158

  Plate XII--A Good Example of Tilted Planes             165

  Plate XIII--A Serviceable Form Made of Wire            172

  Plate XIV--The Under Body of the Monoplane
  Shown in Plate XIII                                    179

  Plate XV--A Simple Model which Proves Steady in
  Flight                                                 184

  Plate XVI--The Propeller and Shaft of the Model
  Shown in Plate XV                                      189

  Plate XVII--An Ingenious Model which Fails to Fly      196

  Plate XVIII--A Good Model Excepting That Its
  Vertical Rudders Are Too Large                         201

  Plate XIX--A Simple Cellular Form                      208

  Plate XX--A Cellular Type with Rudder and Elevating
  Plane                                                  213

  Plate XXI--A Complicated Model Capable of Long
  Flights                                                220

  Plate XXII--An Interesting Form which Flies
  Backward or Forward                                    225

  Plate XXIII--A Well Built Model Badly Proportioned     230

  Plate XXIV--Wright Model Ready for Flight              235

  Plate XXV--Another View of the Wright Model            246

  Plate XXVI--An Ingenious Model which Rises
  Quickly                                                251

  Plate XXVII--An Aëroplane with Paper Wings             255

  A Very Simple Monoplane for Beginners                  262

  Otto Lilienthal about to Take Flight                   267

  A Machine for Testing the Lifting Power of Aëroplanes  274

  Maxim’s First Aëroplane                                280

  The Machine on the Rails, as it Appeared in 1893       280

  First Flight of the Wright Brothers’ First Motor
  Machine                                                285

  Three-quarter View of a Flight at Simms Station,
  November 16, 1904                                      292

  Front View of the Flight of the Wright Aëroplane,
  October 4, 1905                                        297



PART I

MODELS: HOW TO BUILD
AND FLY THEM



THE BOYS’ BOOK OF MODEL AEROPLANES


CHAPTER I

THE NEW SPORT FOR BOYS


In the boy’s calendar nowadays the aëroplane season comes in with
sledding and runs all through skating, marble, top, kite-flying, and
bicycle time. The delights of all the old games seem to be found in
this marvelous new toy. The fun in throwing a top cannot compare with
that of launching an aëroplane, while kite-flying is a very poor
substitute for the actual conquest of the air. To watch one of these
fascinating little ships of the air, which you have fashioned and built
with your own hands, actually rise from the earth and soar aloft with
a swallow’s swiftness, is perhaps the greatest boy’s sport in the
world. Certainly no new game or toy has ever taken such hold of the
boy’s imagination, and in so short a time enrolled such an army of
enthusiasts.

Throughout the country to-day upward of ten thousand boy aviators
are struggling with the problem of the air-ship. Among these junior
aëronauts the record for height and that for distance in flying are
matters of quite as lively interest as among the grown-ups. The great
contests of aviators here and abroad are watched with intelligent
interest. Let a new form of aëroplane, a biplane or monoplane, appear,
and it is quickly reproduced by scores of models and its virtues put
to an actual test. If a new wing or new plan for insuring stability is
invented, a new thought in the steering-device, or some new application
of power, it is instantly the subject of earnest discussion among the
junior aëronauts the country over.

Nor are junior aëronauts merely imitators. The mystery of the problems
of the air, the fascination of a new world of conquest, make a strong
appeal to the American temperament. With thousands of bright boys
working with might and main to build air-ships which will actually fly,
there is certain to be real progress. Thousands of different models
have been designed and put to actual test. This army of inventors,
ranging in age from twelve to eighteen years, some of whom will be the
aviators of the future, cannot fail to do great service, as time goes
on, in the actual conquest of the air.

Within a few months this army of inventors has become organized into
clubs, and a regular program of tournaments has been arranged. The
junior aëro clubs are found in connection with many schools, both
public and private; they are made features of the Young Men’s Christian
Association amusements, or they become identified with various
neighborhoods. Tournaments are arranged between clubs of different
cities or States, while an international tournament is even planned
between the United States and Great Britain.

The junior aëro world has its prizes, which are scarcely less coveted
than the rewards for actual flight. Some fifty medals have been
distributed this year among the members of the New York Junior Aëro
Club. Many elaborate trophies will be contended for during 1910 by
the junior aëronauts of the country. A handsome silver cup of special
design has been presented by Mr. A. Leo Stevens, and a second by
Mr. Sidney Bowman, while similar trophies are offered by Commodore
Marshall, O. Chanute, and others.

The toy aëroplane is not limited to any one season, as one’s sled,
kite, or skates. In the winter months the tests of flight may be
carried out in any large room or hall. There is even an advantage in
holding such a tournament in a large school-room, riding-academy,
or armory, since there is no baffling wind to contend with. Already
definite rules have been laid down for conducting these tests and for
making official records of flights. It is possible, therefore, to
compare the records made in different cities or countries with one
another.

[Illustration: A Junior Aëroclub with Its Instructor in One of the New
York Public Schools.]

The junior aëro tournaments are likely to be the most thrilling
experience in a boy’s life. The feats which the world has watched with
such breathless interest at aviation meets at Rheims, Pau, or Los
Angeles are reproduced in miniature in these boys’ contests without
loss of enthusiasm. The weeks or months of preparation in scores of
little workshops are now put to an actual test. The model air-ship,
which has cost so many anxious and delightful hours in the building, is
to spread its wings with scores of similar air-craft. The superiority
of the monoplane or biplane forms is to be tested without fear or favor.

For the young inventors, even for the mere layman in such matters,
the scene is extremely animated. On every hand one sees the inventors
tuning up their air-craft for the final test. There are lively
discussions in progress over the marvelous little toys. The layman
hears a new language spoken with perfect confidence about him. The boys
have already made the picturesque vocabulary of the world of aviation
their own. The discussion ranges over monoplanes and biplanes, cellular
types, and flexed planes, or of rigid and lateral braces. To hear a
crowd of these enthusiasts shout their comments as the air-ships fly
about is in itself an education in advanced aëronautics.

Directly the floor is cleared, the judges take their position, and the
junior sky-pilot toes the mark, air-ship in hand. “One, two, three,”
shouts the starter, and with a whir the graceful air-craft is launched.
The flutter of the tiny propeller suggests the sudden rise of a covey
of partridges. The little craft, at once so graceful and frail,
defies all the accepted laws of gravitation. It darts ahead in long,
undulating curves as it floats over the invisible air-currents. As in
the aëroplanes of larger size, the length of the flight is dependent
almost wholly on the motive power. As the little engine slows down,
the craft wavers, and then in a long curve, for it can do nothing
ungraceful, it glides to rest, skidding along the floor like a bird
reluctant to leave the sky.

When the time comes for the races between the air-craft, enthusiasm
runs high. Naturally these contests are the most popular features of
the tournament. A line of inventors, with their air-craft, usually six
at a time, take their positions at the starting-line. Each air-craft
has been tuned to its highest powers. The labor of weeks, the study
of air-craft problems, the elaboration of pet inventive schemes, are
represented in the shining model. And the problem before the young
inventors is most baffling. There are few models to work from, the
science is still so young, and the inventor may well feel himself
something of a Columbus in launching his frail craft upon this
uncharted sea.

At the signal half a dozen propellers are instantly released, a
whirring as of innumerable light wings fills the air. The curious
flock of mechanical birds rises and falls, dipping in long, graceful
curves as they struggle toward the goal. Some graceful little craft
perfectly reproducing to the last detail the famous Wright machine
shoulders along beside a glistening monoplane which resembles a great
hawk with wings outspread. The next craft is perhaps a complicated
arrangement of planes of no registered type, while the craft made
familiar by the photographs of the famous aviators are reproduced.

The thrill of an aëroplane race is a sensation peculiarly its own.
It seems so astonishing that the graceful little craft should remain
aloft at all, that they are a never-failing delight to the eye. The
varying fortunes of the race, the temporary lead gained by one craft,
to be lost the next moment to another, which a second later itself
falls behind, and the final heat between the survivors in the race as
they approach the goal, are enough to drive the average boy crazy with
delight.

[Illustration: A Young Inventor in His Workshop.]

[Illustration: Boys Comparing Models.]

The rules for these contests are rigidly observed. Each air-craft is
sent aloft by its inventor or owner. The start must be made from a
mark, and of course each aëroplane must toe the mark. There must be
three judges for each event. One stands at the starting-line and gives
the word of command for the start of the race or flight, as the case
may be. A second judge stands midway down the course, and the third
at or near the finishing-line. Each young aviator winds up his craft,
adjusts the power with his own hands, and sets the rudder for the
flight.

The miniature air-craft must act in flight exactly the same as the
great working air-craft which carry men aloft. A toy air-ship must
make its flight in a horizontal position, and if it turns over in
flight, even though it flies farther and faster than any other, it is
disqualified. The craft must also fly in a reasonably straight line
toward the goal, and should it be deflected for any reason and go off
at a tangent, the flight, no matter how successful otherwise, will
not be counted. In case of a collision between air-craft, the race
is repeated. The responsibility for adjusting the power, arranging
the steering-gear, and giving direction to the flight at the start is
entirely in the hands of the young engineer himself.

In measuring the length of the flights, again, the point at which the
air-ship first touches the ground is fixed arbitrarily as the end.
Often the little craft merely grazes the ground to rise and skid for
many feet, but in the official count this secondary flight is not
considered. First and last, no one but the owner of the little craft
is permitted to touch it. The grace with which the ship lands is also
taken into consideration in granting the prizes. Each boy is permitted
three trials. As in the regular aviation world, these records rarely
stand for more than a few days at a time.

These air-ships are driven by ropes of rubber bands which are turned
on themselves until they are tightly knotted, when in unwinding they
serve to drive the propeller around some hundreds of times. The rubber
is so light that it adds little to the weight of the craft. The motor
is of course a makeshift and at best only serves to keep the propeller
in motion for a fraction of a minute. Experiments have been made in
driving the propeller with compressed air, which is carried in an
aluminium rod fastened beneath the planes. But the force of thousands
of youthful inventive geniuses is certain to bring forth some new
motive power.

It is characteristic of the American boy that our young aviators should
feel themselves disgraced to fly a model not of their own make. As a
result, miniature craft of amazing ingenuity and workmanship are being
turned out by the amateur aviators all over the country. The materials
employed, such as rattan, bamboo, or light lath, and the silk for
covering the planes, or the wires for bracing the frame, cost but a few
pennies. Toy aviation is one of the most democratic of sports.



CHAPTER II

WHY THE AEROPLANE FLIES


The aviator must venture in his frail craft upon an unknown and
uncharted sea. The great problem is to ride the shifting air currents
and keep the machine right side up. Although we cannot see the air
currents, we know that they are constantly ebbing and flowing, piling
themselves in great heaps, or slipping away in giddy vortices. There is
much beautiful scenery, high mountain peaks, deep valleys, and level
plains formed by these ever shifting air currents through which the
aviator must steer his course blindly as best he may. A great bank of
whirling clouds driven before the wind shows how rough and tumbling a
sea he must navigate.

The air being a much thinner medium than water is, of course, far
more unstable and baffling. Its supporting power is not only very
small but constantly varies. The flying machine which will navigate
successfully in a perfectly quiet atmosphere may be unseaworthy, or
rather, unairworthy, when a wind springs up, or the shifting of the
wind may spoil all the air pilot’s plans. To add to his troubles, the
aviator must move among air currents which change and change again in a
moment’s time. As we study the difficulties of air navigation we will
appreciate, more than ever, the wonderful patience, skill, and daring
of the successful aviators.

The action of the air currents had first to be carefully studied before
flight became possible. Although the air is invisible we now know
exactly how the air currents act upon the wings or planes. When a plane
surface, such as the wing of an aëroplane, moves horizontally through
the air, the air is caught for a moment underneath it and is pressed
down slightly and a moment later slips out again from under the other
edges at the sides and back. It is this air under pressure which yields
a slight support.

It has been proven by many experiments that this supporting power
varies with the shape of the plane or surface driven horizontally
through the air. A long narrow surface driven sideways gains much
more support from the air than the same area in the form of a square
or any other shape. In other words, a square surface ten feet square
containing 100 square feet will not travel as far as a surface twenty
feet long and five feet wide.

The explanation is very simple. As the square surface moves along, the
air is momentarily compressed under the front edge, but instantly slips
off at the back and sides. As the broad surface of the rectangular
plane cuts the air, however, few of the air currents can escape at the
sides while the most of them are crowded together and held in place
until they slip off at the back. The supporting power of the plane is
therefore in direct proportion to the length of the front or, as it is
called, the entering edge of the plane.

Here we find one of the secrets of the flight of birds. The spread
between the tips of their outstretched wings is much greater than the
width of the wings themselves. It also explains why the Wright model,
for instance, should be so oddly shaped and should move sideways like a
crab. If you study the models of the successful monoplanes with this in
mind they have a new meaning. The law of the proportion of the entering
edge is very important in designing an aëroplane.

It is so important for the air to be confined as long as possible
beneath the gliding plane that many devices have been tried to hold it.
Some planes are built with a slight edge running around the sides and
back, on the under surface, to hem in the air. Some of the biplanes are
built with closed sides, the cellular form they are called, to keep
the air from slipping away. The box kite is constructed with this in
view. The builder of model aëroplanes will find, however, that the
slight edge formed by turning the cloth over the frame of the plane is
sufficient to hold the air.

The flight of a kite, by the way, appears a very simple matter once
this law is understood. The air currents strike the kite at an angle
and are deflected or carrom off at exactly the same angle. A line drawn
through the middle of this angle, exactly bisecting it, will give you
the direction of the force exerted by the wind. Meanwhile the kite
string holds the plane rigidly in position. As the kite darts from side
to side it is merely obeying this law and adjusting itself so that
its surface will stand at right angles to this thrust of the wind. An
aëroplane is simply a kite which makes its own wind or air currents.

The kite is, of course, balanced against the wind currents and kept
more or less stable by its cord, but an aëroplane must balance itself.
The secret of insuring stability was discovered only after years of
experience with gliders in actual flights.

The stability of the aëroplane depends upon the proper adjustment of
the pressure of the air on the machine. There is, of course, a center
of pressure, just as there is a center of gravity in every aëroplane
of whatever form or size. It may be laid down as a general rule that a
plane traveling horizontally in a quiet atmosphere is kept horizontal
and stable by making the centers of pressure and gravity coincide.

The air currents, as we pointed out, are never entirely at rest but
are constantly tilting the plane about. Hold a sheet of stiff paper
horizontally and let it fall. It will flutter to the ground or perhaps
be twirled away, indicating the presence of a number of unexpected air
currents. The aëroplane which would remain stable in a perfectly quiet
atmosphere must overcome all these twists and turns. The problem of
stability has not yet of course been solved. Having reached this stage
in the evolution of the aëroplane the aviator next began to experiment
by bending his wings or planes and throwing out lateral or stability
planes to help him keep his balance.

It was now found that a very little tilting of the planes upward or
downward would serve to right the machine when it leaned over. The
secret, like so many others, was gained by watching the flights of
birds. You have perhaps seen a great albatross or sea gull soar without
the slightest effort and apparently without motion. Look more closely
and you will see that the tips of the broad wings move slightly from
time to time, while the main body of the wings remains rigid, which is
the great secret of stability in flight.

The ends of the planes were next made flexible, very slightly so, and
arranged so that they might be moved up and down or flexed at will. The
flights made with this adjustment were at once brought under control.
New planes were added before and behind, and it was found that the
machine could be kept from darting up and down just as well as tilting
over at the ends. The aëroplane was now ready for the installation of
the motor.

The best curve for the wing of an aëroplane is an irregular curve drawn
above the horizontal line. It is not a perfect arc of a circle but
reaches its greatest height about one third back of the front edge,
with the rest of the line slightly flattened. It is much the same line
as is formed by some waves just before they break. The plane thus
shaped is driven with the blunt or entering edge forward or against the
wind. In building the large aëroplanes this curve is worked out with
great accuracy, but the builder of model airships may carry the line in
his eye.

As the air strikes the entering edge of this surface it is driven
underneath and held there for a moment before it can escape from
beneath this hollow. The support of the air is therefore greater than
in the case of a flat plane, or in fact, any other form. The air which
passes over the top of the entering edge, meanwhile, glides or slips
off at a slight upward angle, thus forming a partial vacuum over the
greater part of the upper surface. This vacuum, in turn, tends to pull
the plane slightly upward thus acting in the same direction as the air
which is compressed beneath it.

The planes thus constructed are, besides, much more easily controlled
than those of any other shape. When the entering edge of this plane is
raised the pressure of the air beneath is increased and the pull of the
partial vacuum combines with it to make it rise. The difficult problem
of getting the aëroplane aloft was largely solved by this curve. Once
aloft, such an airship answers her helm much better than any other form.

This curve is accountable for many of the movements of aëroplanes
which seem so mysterious to the mere layman. When an aëroplane turns,
its outer end rises, and the more rapid is its flight the greater is
this tilt. It must be remembered that the end is moving more rapidly
and the increased speed causes the plane to lift. Many photographs of
aëroplanes show them balanced at precarious angles while making a
turn. If the plane is tilted too high the air currents slip out from
beneath, no vacuum is developed above, and it quickly loses speed. On
the other hand, if it be inclined downward it soon loses the supporting
power of the air and plunges down.

[Illustration: The First Glider Weighted at the Front.]

At every stage of this development the aviators are indebted to the
birds for information. The successful aëroplanes have great width
compared to their depth, they gain stability by flexing the tips of the
wings, and their planes are arched upward and forward exactly as are
the wings of a bird. The aviator arranges his center of gravity after
the same general model, below the planes and well forward. He places
his engine forward, just as the bird has its strongest muscles in the
chest, and he builds his frame of hollow tubes like the bones of a
bird.



CHAPTER III

HOW TO BUILD A “GLIDER”


The simplest form of heavier-than-air machine is the stiff card or
letter which you may spin across the room. If you give it just the
right twirl it will glide on a level for many feet. There are many ways
besides of folding a sheet of stiff paper which will convert it into
a surprisingly clever little airship. With a little practice these
gliders may be made to fly ten or twenty times their own length, which
would be a very creditable flight for the best aëroplane models.

There is no better way to begin the construction of a model aëroplane
than by study and experiment with these paper ships. The most famous
aëronauts of the day, the Wright brothers, Curtiss, Herring, and many
others, have spent years working with gliders before attempting to
build or fly an aëroplane. It is in this way that they discovered what
form of wing would support the greatest weight, whether the passenger
should stand up or lie down, how to place the propeller and the rudder,
and hundreds of other details which have made possible the actual
conquests of the air.

Following in their footsteps, or rather their flights, the amateur
aëronaut should first build and fly only gliders or aëroplanes without
means of self-propulsion. The simplest form of glider may be made by
cutting a broad oval from a sheet of stiff letter-paper and creasing it
down the middle. The experiment may be made more interesting, however,
by cutting out the plane like the outstretched wings of a bird, as
suggested in the accompanying illustration. Try as you may, this sheet
will not fly. Now add a trifling weight to the front of the plane. This
may be done by fastening one or more paper clips to the edge, pasting a
match or a toothpick, or by dropping a little tallow or sealing-wax.

At first you will underestimate the weight your little airship will
carry. Add more weight in the same way, and test its gliding powers
until the little airship will glide gracefully across the floor. Keep
the length of these models under six inches. If you increase it beyond
this, the model loses steadiness and flutters about ineffectively.

An interesting model may be made by folding a sheet of stiff paper in
an arrow-like form. The idea is to form a series of planes which will
support the weight of the tiny craft and, at the same time, enable it
to fly or dart in a straight line. It will be found that the vertical
surfaces lend stability and keep the ship moving in a straight line.
You will soon learn, in this way, more of the principles of aëroplane
construction than mere reading from books can teach you. Be careful,
meanwhile, to remember just how you have launched the various forms
of models, whether you have thrown them with an upward or downward
motion, and how hard a push you have given them. The skill you acquire
in this way will be valuable later on when you come to launch your
regular model aëroplane.

[Illustration: Dowel Strips of Different Sizes.]

We are now ready to begin the construction of the frames of aëroplane
models. The first model will be merely a glider. The frame and wings or
planes of an aëroplane are built much the same as a kite. The idea in
all such work is to combine the greatest possible strength or stability
with extreme lightness. Remember, however, that the aëroplane during
its flights is racked and shaken by its motor, and is likely to land
with a bump. The materials used must be stronger than in the case of
an ordinary kite, the joints more securely formed, and the entire
structure braced in every possible way.

The best materials for constructing these gliders or aëroplanes are
very cheap and easily obtained. At almost any hardware-store you will
find a variety of “dowel-sticks,” which seem especially made for this
work. They are smooth, round sticks a yard in length and of a variety
of diameter. The sticks three sixteenths of an inch in diameter will
be found most serviceable, while the larger sticks are just the thing
for the backbones of your aëroplane. These sticks will not split at the
ends and may be readily worked. They cost one cent apiece.

Some boys find that the reed or cane suits their purpose better than
the dowel-sticks, since it is more flexible and a trifle lighter. The
cane is easy to work when you wish to build planes with curved lines.
It can be readily shaped to any desired form by first wetting it and
allowing it to dry after working. Care must be taken in using it,
since the ends are likely to split. Bundles of this cane may be bought
at most hardware-stores or in department-stores. Enough material for
constructing a model may be bought for a few cents.

The lightest of all available materials is bamboo. It is difficult to
procure, however, and requires more working up than the others. The
best plan is to buy a stick of bamboo, a dry piece, and split it into
strips of the desired length and thickness. The grain is so straight
that there is practically no waste material as in ordinary wood. The
strips may be readily planed or sandpapered. The wood is extremely
light and strong enough for all practical purposes of the model
aëroplane builder. An old bamboo fishing-pole may answer your purpose.

The first gliders constructed should be of the monoplane form, that
is, with a single surface. The biplane or multiplane models will come
later. Meanwhile, one is not losing time in working only on these
simple models, for the experience is valuable and nothing is lost,
since when the frame is properly constructed the motor and propeller
may be added. The work throughout is extremely simple, and there are no
problems of which the average ingenious American boy need be afraid.

[Illustration: DIAGRAM FOR PLAN OF THE AËROPLANE ON PAGE 58.]

[Illustration: DIAGRAM--SHOWN IN PERSPECTIVE. PLATE A.]

To construct the model shown in Plate A first make two frames of
dowel-sticks, bamboo, or reed, or, if these be lacking, of light lath,
the smaller frame 8½ by 19½ and the larger one 10½ by 36½ inches.
Care must be taken to have the sides of the rectangle exactly the same
length and the joints closely and neatly finished. Some boys prefer to
lay one stick over another, then wrap the joint tightly with thin but
strong linen thread, and over this brush a coat of thin glue, without
using any brads or nails.

In kite-building, to be sure, it would be enough to lay the strips
over one another and fasten roughly with a tack. Nor did the lengths
of the stick, when covered with paper, make much if any difference.
The aëroplane, it must be remembered, travels edgewise, and, having no
guiding string, is at the mercy of every gust of wind. If the frames
are carelessly proportioned it will not travel true, but is likely to
be deflected. Imagine a boat whose sides are not exactly uniform trying
to travel in a straight line. It would be lopsided, and would roll and
pitch under the most favorable conditions. Now an aëroplane, since it
travels in so thin a medium as air, is far more sensitive than a boat,
and it becomes lopsided if its proportions be in the least inaccurate.
Only the greatest care in construction will produce an air craft which
will fly true and straight.

It makes little or no difference in a kite if the ends project a
little and the joints be carelessly made. Not only must your aëroplane
be perfectly proportioned, but it must be finished like a piece of
fine furniture. The question of friction is a very important one in
the heavier-than-air machine. You cannot be too careful to round off
every corner and smooth every exposed surface. If you have opportunity
to see a regular aëroplane, a Wright or Curtiss model, you will find
that every part of the machine has been sandpapered and varnished with
the greatest care. This is not done for the sake of appearances, but
because it has been found that the wind striking against the rough
piece of wood meets an appreciable amount of resistance, whereas
it slips past a polished surface with little or no friction. Your
aëroplane should be finished like a violin.

[Illustration: A Coil of Cane or Reed.]

In building these planes be careful to compare the lengths of the
corresponding sides throughout. If you prefer to use brads for
fastening the joints do so. The dowel-stick and bamboo will take the
brads with little danger of splitting. When thoroughly dry, cut away
the glue which has squeezed out, round off the ends, and sandpaper with
fine sand or emery-paper. If you use brads it will not be necessary to
place the joints in a vise while drying. Should your strips split, bore
the holes with a fine awl. Some boys after drilling the holes merely
tie and glue the sticks together, using no nails whatever.

Now cut three dowel-strips 34 inches long and slightly sharpen their
ends, so that when brought together they will form a prism whose base
is about one fourth their length. Next bend a strong piece of wire into
a hook--a hair-pin will answer for small models--and fasten it in the
apex of the prism, with the hook inside. The projecting end of wire
should then be bent over, and the three dowel-sticks glued and tied
tightly together.

At the open end of the prism next fasten two strips from end to end,
leaving the third side of the triangle open. Now fasten your two planes
on the open side of the prism, slightly mortising the sticks and gluing
and nailing them securely in position. To further strengthen the
prism, join the three sides at the middle with three sticks, forming
a complete triangle. The prism thus braced will be found as strong as
a heavy central stick, besides being much lighter and providing an
excellent base for the propeller. A strong stick about half an inch
square should be tied and glued across the middle of the triangle at
the base of the prism to support the motor.

The frame once complete, sandpapered and varnished, it is ready to be
covered. At first this may be done with some smooth paper. Almost any
thin material, muslin or linen, will answer for the purpose, although
white silk makes the most finished-looking model. Such scraps as may
be found in the family piece-bag will answer every purpose. In sewing
the cloth over the frame the advice of some big sister, aunt, or the
mother may well be taken. The idea is to fasten the cloth smoothly
and neatly over the frame, keeping the surface free from creases or
wrinkles of any kind. Boys are likely to be awkward with the needle.
The cloth may also be glued over the frames. When complete cover the
planes with a thin solution of paraffin dissolved in benzine.

In attaching the planes or wings to the central axis of the model, the
larger stick or backbone may be mortised neatly, so that the sides of
the frame will be sunk in flush with the upper surface. A fairly good
glider may be made, however, by merely nailing down the frames against
this backbone. The distance between the two planes is a complicated
problem, but the beginner had better at first imitate the model shown
in the accompanying illustration. If the two supporting planes be too
far apart or too near together, the glider will fall. The amateur must
experiment by changing their position on the central axis until he hits
the right proportion. He will be able later to carry this proportion
in his eye, and the experience will prove invaluable. Until you have
hit upon the proper position, fasten them to the backbone with rubber
bands. These permit you to slide the planes back and forth without the
trouble of nailing.

Aëroplanes, unlike kites, fly best in a perfectly quiet atmosphere. If
you make your trial flights out of doors, select a quiet day. A room,
a barn, or any large interior will be found better. In launching your
glider, hold it from beneath, so that it balances, and throw it forward
with a swift, steady movement of the arm. A little practice will make
you very expert.

[Illustration: Splitting a Bamboo Fish-Pole.]

You will now find yourself fitted to reproduce any of the simpler
forms of monoplane models, several of which are here illustrated. An
interesting model is made by attaching U-shaped wings to a central
axis. In making these curved planes the reed will be found useful.
Other effective gliders are made with triangular wings fixed at
a variety of angles. Remember that the model must be absolutely
symmetrical. In attaching the frames to the central axis, always make
the joints as smooth and rigid as possible.

The weighting of the glider will be found to be a very important
detail. As a rule the gliders require a considerable weight at the
front. The exact position of the weight can only be determined by
experiment. The simplest way is to wire a nail or a piece of metal
to the edge of the frame. If your glider does not balance perfectly,
which is likely to be the case, this fault can be largely remedied
by weighting it. The tendency of the glider is likely to be upward,
and the weight serves to keep it on an even keel. When your model
glides steadily through the air, without rolling or pitching, you have
constructed a well-balanced frame. It will then be time to take up the
problem of propulsion.



CHAPTER IV

BUILDING THE MOTOR


A well-constructed glider alone makes a fascinating toy, but once the
motor has been installed it seems almost alive. Your little craft will
now be ready for new conquests. It will imitate the flights of the
famous aviators, contending with the same problems, perhaps meeting
similar accidents.

The motor is the most interesting, as it is the most important, detail
of the aëroplane. Although it is possible to buy the propellers for the
motor, it is advisable that every boy should work out this problem for
himself. An effective motor is easy to build, and costs practically
nothing. The length of your propeller-blades should be equal to about
one third the width of your largest plane. For this you will need six
strips of some light wood, such as pine or ash, although a cigar-box
wood, if the grain be straight, will answer. Cut the strips to measure
about half an inch in width and one eighth of an inch thick. (See Plate
B.)

[Illustration: THE PROPELLER BEFORE CUTTING DOWN. PLATE B.]

The strips should be covered with a thin glue and laid one on top of
another, and a very thin nail be carefully driven through the little
pile at the exact center between the two ends. While the glue is still
soft, turn the sticks on the axis formed by the nail, so that they make
a double fan, spacing the outer edges about one quarter of an inch
apart. Be certain that the fan is regular, and then give the nail a
final rap to tighten its hold and keep all the glued surfaces together,
and set away to dry. If you can prop up the ends it will be better to
put a flat-iron or other weight on each end to make the strips glue
together tighter.

The thrust or propelling power depends as much upon the curves of the
propeller as upon the force with which the motor is driven. If the
propeller be too flat, it will not take hold of the air, while if the
pitch or angle of the curve be too sharp, it will simply bore holes in
the air and create a vacuum which is useless. The pitch should be about
one in twelve; that is, if the propeller-blade be twelve inches long,
the curve should be one inch high.

When the glue is thoroughly dry and hard the projecting step-like edges
may be cut away. A flat chisel or an ordinary pen-knife will do the
work. Be careful to keep the ends uniform, since much depends upon
the balance. Cut away the wood until the blades are one eighth of an
inch or less in thickness, and round off the corners. The propeller
should then be sandpapered perfectly smooth and varnished. You will be
delighted to find how professional and shipshape the finished propeller
will be.

Now carefully remove the nail fastening the pieces, and you will find,
of course, that it marks the exact center and forms a perfect axis.
Should you need to enlarge this hole, do not attempt to bore it,
since this may split the wood, but burn it out, using a nail heated
over a gas-flame. Now insert a stiff wire in this hole--a hat-pin
will answer--and fasten it by clenching it at the back tight to the
propeller, and fill up the hole with glue. The photographs of the
propellers of various models will give you an excellent idea of the
proper curve.

Aviators differ as to the proper position for the propellers in toy
aëroplanes. Here is a problem you must work out for yourself. Some
believe that the propeller placed in front of the planes gets a firmer
grip on the air, since when the propeller is at the stern the planes
make many disturbing currents, just as a steamship churns the water
in its wake. Others argue that by placing this propelling force at
the rear of the planes the craft is made more steady. At any rate,
excellent flights may be made with either arrangement.

In connecting up your propeller with the motor it is very important
that the shaft should turn freely and that the bearings offer the least
possible resistance. If you have built your aëroplane from the drawing
(see Plate A), now drill a hole exactly in the center of the stick
which crosses the triangle at the rear of the frame. This hole will
come on a line with the apex of the prism, or exactly in the center of
the triangle. When the turning of the motor pulls the ends of the frame
together, the strain will therefore be exactly distributed among the
three sides or braces.

The propeller must be kept clear of the frame and must never touch or
scrape against it. First a thin strip of metal, drilled to take the
axle or hat-pin, should be nailed over the hole in the crosspiece. A
sheet of aluminium such as is used for name-plates is just the thing.
Now on the propeller-wire or axis string a smooth, symmetrical glass
bead, and pass the axle through the metal strip and the crosspiece.
This will give you an excellent substitute for ball-bearings. The end
of the wire should then be turned into a hook well inside the frame.
The propeller should be mounted so carefully that it will turn freely
without friction and without wabbling from side to side.

The simplest and most effective motor is formed by connecting the two
hooks with many turns of a long, thin strand of rubber, which can
be bought by the yard or pound. The thinner strands of rubber will
exert more force than the heavy bands, and red rubber is more durable
than any other. The bands should be looped loosely between the two
hooks, just as you would wind a skein of zephyr--over the hook on
the propeller-“shaft,” then around the hook at the other end, then
down over the propeller-shaft hook, and so on. If the hooks be three
feet apart the combined strands should form a band one inch or more
in diameter. If you cannot buy the rubber in this form, a number of
two-inch rubber bands, such as you buy by the box at the stationer’s,
may be lopped chain fashion together to form a continuous rope from
hook to hook.

To store up energy for the flight, simply turn your propeller round
and round until the rope of rubber bands is tightly knotted. You can
readily tell when it is sufficiently wound and the danger-point is
reached, which comes when the pull of the rubber grows too strong
for your frame. The average motor should be turned about one hundred
and fifty times. When the propeller is released the rubber bands
in unwinding will give you back almost exactly the same number of
revolutions, less perhaps one or two, which represents the loss through
friction.

[Illustration: Model Constructed from Diagram, Plate A.]

If the propeller simply buzzes around, coming to rest in a few seconds,
without raising your aëroplane, it is probably too small for the
weight of the aëroplane. When fully wound up the propeller should run
for about ten seconds. On the other hand, if the propeller be too
large, it will quickly twist the aëroplane out of its course and drive
it to earth. It is well to try out your motor thoroughly to make sure
of its running smoothly before attempting any actual flights.

Do not yield to the temptation of trying your wings, however, until
the skids have been attached. Most of the regular full-size aëroplanes
run on ordinary bicycle wheels, although the Wrights use runners like
a sleigh. These skids or runners enable the machine to run along the
ground with the least possible friction and greatly assist in rising.
In the models of aëroplanes the skids serve a double purpose in
protecting the machine when it alights.

A serviceable skid may be made by building a triangle of thin strips
and attaching it to the frame with the broad side downward, as shown
in the accompanying drawing. Skids made of reed curving down from the
main body of the aëroplane will also serve to take up the shock. There
are many ways of constructing these skids, and a study of the models
here illustrated will give many suggestions. If you intend to have your
aëroplane start from the ground, the front skids should be somewhat
longer than those in the rear to give it the proper lift.

The friction of the skids is greatly reduced by mounting them on
wheels. Small metal wheels may be borrowed from toy automobiles, or
small disks of wood or cork will answer for the purpose. A very simple
axis may be formed by running a long hat-pin through the uprights of
the skids. The photographs of the best models will be found full of
suggestions. You will need at least three skids to form a tripod for
your aëroplane. It makes little difference if you use one leg in front,
or two.

It is very important that the frame should be properly braced to
withstand the strain brought upon it. In the glider this bracing is
less important, but the action of the motor changes the situation.
The rapid movement of the propellers wracks the entire frame, and the
impact on landing is naturally greater when the weight is increased.
A thin copper wire, No. 32, 34, or 36, should be used, which will be
found strong and flexible, while adding little to the weight. After
constructing your aëroplane go over it carefully and cut away the
wood wherever it may be lightened, and then strengthen it by bracing.
Wherever a joint may be strengthened or a strut or a plane be made more
rigid by bracing, do not spare the wire.

The accompanying drawing, with the photographs of models, will indicate
how these braces may best be applied. To begin with, braces should be
run, wherever possible, from the corners of the planes to the central
frame and the skids. In the monoplane forms you will find it worth
while to add posts or perpendiculars to the upper side of the frame
and run wire braces diagonally to the ends of the planes. The extreme
ends of the planes should also be connected.

No matter how carefully you have constructed your aëroplane, you will
find the planes have a tendency to sag and become wrinkled. These
braces give you the opportunity to pull them taut and hold them in this
position. This is commonly called “tuning up” the aëroplane. It will
be found convenient to fasten small rings to the ends of the braces
whenever they may be slipped over the ends of the frame to save the
trouble of winding. The more perfectly your aëroplane is tuned up, the
greater will be its speed and distance qualities.

[Illustration: Splitting the Cigar Box Cover to Build the Propeller.]

An excellent monoplane for the beginner is shown in drawing. (Plate
C.) It is very simple and easily adjusted, and when well tuned up will
fly upward of two hundred feet. The two planes are built separately
in the proportion indicated. The frame consists of a central stick
supported by triangular skids. An ordinary hat-pin run through the
supports near the ground serves as an axle for wooden disks or wheels.
The front skids are made somewhat higher to give the front planes the
proper angle of elevation.

[Illustration: THE DIAGRAM OF A MONOPLANE. Planes measure 20 inches by
8 inches. The motor base is 36 inches in length. PLATE C.]

The bracing of the planes is simple but effective, and should be copied
carefully, particularly the double bracing in the rear, using ordinary
wire for the purpose. A double support is used for the axle of the
propeller, an excellent idea, which keeps the shaft rigidly in place.
It is formed by fastening two blocks drilled to hold the axle to the
bottom of the main frame. The planes are held taut by wires running
from the corners to a post at the middle of the plane. The front plane
is hinged at its rear edge, and may be tilted by pulling back a piece
of whalebone fastened at its center, which is tacked to the top of the
frame. The rudder turns on a triangular frame attached to the top of
the rear plane. A string passes through the rear end of the rudder to
the rear edge of the plane, forming a triangle, which makes it possible
to adjust the rudder-plane and fix it rigidly in position.

After you have built one or two models you will find yourself
confronted by a bewildering number of schemes for constructing new
forms. It will be found a very simple matter to use stiff wire for many
parts of your model instead of wood or reed. In building rounded planes
the wire will be a convenience. The wire may be attached to the wooden
frame by embedding it in the wood and binding it fast. And, by the way,
you can get a surprising effect by painting your wooden frame with
silver paint, as the Wrights do. To all appearance you will have an
aluminium frame.

An aëroplane to be considered shipshape must be even more perfect
in every detail than the finest racing yacht. Go over your model,
scrutinize every detail; if after taking every precaution, your
planes do not fit like the sails of a racing yacht, cover them with a
thin solution of paraffin. On hardening, this will hold the material
perfectly smooth, so that the planes will offer a perfect lifting
surface.

The amateur aëronaut must be prepared for disappointments. An aëroplane
is one of the crankiest crafts in the world to manage. It may twist
and turn, plunge in and out, up and down, apparently without the least
excuse. There is always, however, a good reason somewhere for its
behavior. As you learn its ways, which, after all, are very simple, the
flights will be longer, swiftier, and steadier. There is no toy in the
world which so quickly repays one for patience and perseverance.



CHAPTER V

FINE POINTS OF CONSTRUCTION


A great many experiments have been made to find whether the flat or
curved wings give the best support, and how sharply the curve should
be drawn. The wings of birds are curved slightly upward, and in the
end, after all the experiments, it has been found that this curve is
just the right one. All forms of aëroplanes will fly more swiftly and
steadily if the planes be slightly bowed or flexed. After you have
built your aëroplane with flat wings it will repay you to replace them
with flexed planes, and you will find that the experience in building
models will make this construction very simple.

The lighter and more flexible materials, such as bamboo or cane, are
best for the curved planes. After you have decided upon the dimensions
of the wings cut the pieces for the ends slightly longer than the
width of your planes. These pieces may then be bent by steaming them
over a kettle of boiling water and bending to the desired curve. When
dry they will hold their shape remarkably well. Another plan is to use
a flexible strip and pull the ends together by a strong thread or wire
until the wood is bowed to just the right curve. A corset steel or
whalebone may readily be curved in the same way. It is a common mistake
to curve the plane too sharply, when the resistance offered to the air
will be greater than that with the flat plane.

A plane two or three feet in width cannot be held in shape merely
by curving the end pieces. A series of ribs must be added at equal
distances, each having, of course, exactly the same upward curve. The
ribs may be fastened to the sides of the planes with small brads or
simply with glue or wire. The covering should then be drawn down. A
very smooth covering may be made of rice-paper. Cut the sheets the
proper size and lay them for a few minutes between moistened cloths.
Now stretch the paper carefully over the frame and glue in position.
When dry the paper will contract and leave a smooth, taut surface like
the head of a drum.

Much depends upon the curve of the plane. A wing whose curve is not
a perfect arc of a circle, but which is rounded just back of the
front edge and flattened at the rear, will be found to offer the
least resistance to the air. The best plan is to study the curves in
the aëroplanes or models and imitate them. Different models require
different planes. It is a problem which each young aëronaut must work
out for himself.

[Illustration: A Model Aëroplane Built from the Drawing (Plate C, Chap.
IV).]

The question of rudders or guiding planes is very important. It is
too much to expect of even the best model that it will fly in an
unswerving line. Any simple vertical plane which may be turned from
side to side and held in position will act as a rudder. There is great
difference of opinion as to the proper size and position of these
guiding surfaces. It is argued by some aviators that the rudder should
be placed above the plane, where the air is undisturbed, while others
believe that the partial vacuum created above the wings in flight makes
the propeller ineffective. Still others argue that a rudder placed back
of the planes affords a leverage, and is therefore more effective. Try
a rudder in each position. It is impossible to lay down a law for all
models.

The larger models should be equipped with twin propellers. In building
these the greatest care should be taken to have them exactly the same
size, weight, and pitch. Twin propellers should, as a rule, be placed
at the front of the machine, that is, they should pull and not push the
planes. If by any accident the motor of one should fail, the second
propeller will continue to keep the aëroplane afloat and break its fall
on descending. With the propellers at the stern of the little airship,
the failure of one would cause the plane to pitch downward, and the
remaining propeller would drive it down to possible disaster.

In winding up the two motors, care should be taken to give both the
same number of turns. The aëroplane may be launched by holding a
propeller in either hand and releasing simultaneously. The double
motor insures a steadier as well as a longer flight. Always turn the
propellers in opposite directions. In flying they must spin around
either toward each other or away from each other. If they turn the same
way they will give the model a torque which no rudder could possibly
overcome.

The efficiency of your motor depends more upon its length than its
diameter. In constructing the motor-base, especially for the larger
models, arrange to have the strands of rubber bands extend the entire
length of your aëroplane, and if necessary, project well forward of
the front plane. Such a motor in unwinding will exert a more sustained
force. The shorter strands of greater diameter will unwind much more
quickly and give very short flights.

With a little experience you will soon learn to gauge your motor to the
needs of your air-ship. It is, of course, absolutely necessary that the
force exerted by the motor should be sufficient to keep your aëroplane
in rapid motion, but it is easy to make it too powerful. If it were
possible to attach a “governor” to your motor, this would not matter
so much. But since this is practically out of the question, the motor
itself must be very nicely proportioned to the demand made upon it. You
will soon be able to judge between the steady whir of a good motor, and
the buzz of a propeller which races. There is a distinct note for each.

The motor is, at present, the great problem of the model aëroplane. The
rubber bands are, at best, only a make-shift. It is practically out of
the question to get a flight of more than fifteen seconds in this way,
so that the distance is limited to a little more than two hundred feet.
It is doubtless only a question of time before a much more efficient
form of motor will be invented. Very probably, some amateur aviator
will be the first to apply a new means of propulsion, which would be an
important achievement indeed.

The simplest form of motor after the rubber bands would seem to be some
form of metal spring which could be wound up. Long before the days
of automobiles, as we now know them, wagons were built with motors
of springs, and some surprising runs were obtained. The spring lends
itself to many forms of construction, and is not expensive. It will
be necessary to control its action in some way, however, to prevent
it from racing and running down in almost no time, like the too heavy
rubber motors. It might be found interesting to experiment with the
spring to be found in the ordinary roller-shade. The weight of these
springs is not too great to be carried by a good aëroplane model,
which, of course, is a great factor in their favor.

[Illustration: Detail of Rudder and Propeller of Model Built from
Drawing (Plate C).]

A number of experiments have been made in France to equip aëroplane
models with compressed-air motors. The compressed air is carried in
a hollow tube in much the same position as the rubber bands. Many
believe that the motor problem, for the toy aëroplane will be solved in
this way. A number of interesting models have also been equipped with
clock-work motors. A small movement, such as may be borrowed from some
mechanical toys, will run for a minute or more. What glorious flights
would be possible if our models could be kept aloft--say five times as
long as at present. When you feel that you thoroughly understand your
model, borrow the clock work from some old toy and make the experiment.
It is possible to buy motors for model aëroplanes. The smallest of
these develops one half horsepower, weighs seven pounds and will run
for fifteen minutes.

The best covering for the wings still remains largely an open question.
Although your model will make successful flights with almost any kind
of covering, you will find that its stability will be increased and
the flight lengthened by a little attention to this detail. According
to the Wright Brothers, the most successful covering is the one which
offers the greatest resistance to the air. The pressure of the air
upward under the planes tends to force its way through the meshes of
even the finest cloth. The addition of a coat of varnish will prevent
this leakage. A light parchment will also be found effective. It will
be well to experiment with a variety of coverings.

A very light, serviceable frame may be made for your motor-base by
using hollow shafts or sticks. Procure a very thin, light wood, such as
is used for veneering, and after cutting it carefully into strips, glue
them together to form a hollow shaft about an inch square. Although the
shell may be only one sixteenth of an inch thick, the frame will be
found strong enough for all practical purposes. A hollow frame of this
kind will save several ounces of weight.

The builder of aëroplane models will find a good friend in aluminium.
It is strong enough for all purposes of the model air-ship and, even
when used freely, adds almost nothing to the weight. The metal costs
ninety cents a pound, but it is so light that, at this rate, it will
be found a very cheap material. Comparatively thick pieces may be used
for braces or for angles, thus making the frame absolutely rigid, while
adding but a fraction of an ounce to the weight. The metal, being
comparatively soft, is easily worked, and simple castings may be made
at little expense.

Many builders of aëroplanes waste time and ingenuity quite
unnecessarily in constructing sets of wheels for carrying their models.
The time would be better employed in looking to your planes. The
amount of friction saved by attaching wheels, even good ones, to your
model, is after all very trifling. Should the wheels jam or stick,
which is likely to be the case with such small models, they are worse
than skids, and besides, add appreciably to the weight. A light skid
is better than a clumsy wheel. If your model fails to rise from the
ground, the fault is not at all likely to be in the skids, but in the
thrust or lifting-surface.

An excellent plan for guiding the flights is to add square frames of
soft lead wire to the front or cutting-edge of your front planes. Bend
a piece of wire to form three sides of a square, each two or three
inches long, and fasten the loose ends to the plane. By bending these
up or down, the center of gravity may be altered at a touch. If your
model goes askew, you may bend one of these up and the other down,
until you get the desired balance.

In actual practice, the soaring- or floating-planes seem to add greater
stability to the model and effect to a marked degree the length of the
flight. It is difficult to tell exactly why. The planes in passing may
create an eddy in the air, a following wave, as it were, which tends to
retard the flight, while the floating-plane smoothes this out. In any
event, here is an experiment well worth trying.



CHAPTER VI

SIMPLE MONOPLANE MODELS


Of the variety of aëroplanes, there seems to be no end. Nature offers
a bewildering variety of models in the innumerable birds and insects,
which may be accepted as successful monoplanes. These, in turn, may be
copied and modified indefinitely. The science of aviation is still so
young that there is ample opportunity for invention and discovery for
all, and every new trial adds something to our information, and carries
the science a step nearer perfection.

It will be found an excellent plan to build, once and for all, a
strong well proportioned motor base, and mount a powerful motor and
well modeled propeller. A variety of planes may then be tested out by
attaching them to this. The motor base will answer for practically all
monoplane forms and many biplane models as well. Such a frame should be
about three feet in length and carry one or better two motors, placed
side by side.

There is as much danger in providing too much lifting-surface in
your aëroplane as too little. This fault is well illustrated in an
exceedingly clever French model (Plate I). Although the model is well
constructed, and appears ship-shape at first glance, it nevertheless
has far too much surface and will not fly well. If the depth of the
wings were reduced fully one half, it would have a much better chance.

The best lifting-planes are those which present a broad front or
entering edge, but with comparatively little depth. The successful
flying-machines, whether monoplanes or biplanes, use these very wide
but shallow planes forward. The theory is of course that the air is
caught for an instant beneath the plane and before it has a chance to
slip off the sides, the wing has caught its very slight supporting
power and moved on to new and undisturbed air.

With this rule in mind examine the model’s front plane once more. It
will be seen that, as the air is caught under this broad surface,
it will try to escape in all directions and set up currents of air.
Instantly the broad plane loses its balance and tilts to one side or
the other. No weighting of the plane can overcome this. If the plane
were forced through the air at a very high speed a steady flight might
be possible, but it is useless to try to overcome this tendency to tip
and wabble.

The planes again are badly designed. A perfectly straight front or
entering edge gives the best results. A certain stability is gained by
curving the front plane slightly, this will be discussed later, but
there is no excuse for the semicircle described in this case. Every
inch of surface cut away from the front edge of the plane directly
reduces its lifting power. The arrow like form of the rear plane does
not matter because this is a stability plane, not a lifting plane.
In this case the rear plane is twice the size it should be.

[Illustration: PLATE I. A Clever Folding Model. The Wings Are Broader
than Need Be.]

The propeller of this model is much too small, even if the size of
the planes was correct. It is well placed however at the front of the
model where it may turn in undisturbed air. The passage of these large
planes, or any planes for that matter, is likely to cut up the air just
as a ship churns the water into a wake behind it and the propeller does
not work effectively in these eddies. The motor seems powerful and well
braced, although it might be made even longer by carrying it to the
extreme rear.

Several very useful ideas may be borrowed from the construction of the
frame of this model. It is made entirely of metal, so jointed that it
may be folded up into very compact form like an umbrella. The amateur
model builder should not attempt anything so complicated, but an old
umbrella frame may be used with good results in building a rigid frame.
Use the steel rod of the umbrella as a backbone, and cut away the ribs
you do not need. The others may be bent into various shapes to form the
front or sides of the planes, the skids or braces. Such a construction
is light and perfectly rigid.

A very effective monoplane may be made by curving the front and rear
edges of the forward plane, while keeping the rear or stability plane
rectangular in shape (Plate 2). The curve of this model may be imitated
to advantage, as well as the general proportions. Such a plane is less
likely to be deflected by air currents than a straight entering-edge
and insures longer and steadier flights. Should you be troubled by your
model twisting from side to side in flight try curving the front edge
of the forward plane.

This model is one of the easiest to make and is an excellent one for
beginners. Build the two planes separately making the larger one about
thirty inches in width and ten inches in depth, and the second one
fifteen inches in width and ten inches in depth. The curved sticks may
be worked up by using bamboo or dowel-sticks, soaking them in water
and fastening them in a bowed position while damp and leaving them to
dry. It may be found a good plan to use a heavier stick for the rear
edge of the plane to gain stability.

A single stick about one half an inch in diameter may be used for the
backbone. It will be found an excellent plan to attach the planes
lightly to the main frame so that they may be adjusted before fixing
them finally in position. Place them in the position shown in the
accompanying photograph, and move them up and down until the flights
are all that you expect, when they may be fastened for good and all.
The bracing of this model is excellent and may be safely imitated. It
enables one to tune up either plane and fix them rigidly in position.
The propeller is very properly placed forward although it appears to
be rather small. It is unnecessary to bother with any vertical rudder
for this model since the curve of the front plane insures a reasonably
straight flight.

A popular French model which may be easily imitated consists of curved
planes both front and rear (Plate 3). The curve of the planes is too
complicated to be carried out in wood, but may be readily formed by
bending a stiff wire to the desired shape. The front plane should
be about twelve inches in width and four inches in depth. The rear
should be about half this size and of the same form. The planes may be
readily mounted on a small dowel stick. A small propeller and a motor
a foot in length will answer. A small semi-circular fin should be set
below the rear plane to act as rudder. First cover the frames with a
stiff paper and after you have succeeded in adjusting it, this may be
replaced by cloth. The model will not fly far, or very steadily, but it
is interesting to practice with. The balance of the model is open to
criticism; for the center of gravity appears to be too far forward.

[Illustration: PLATE II. A Model Aëroplane Worth Imitating.]

The simplest of all models to build, and not the least interesting, is
the small paper monoplane (Plate 4). The planes which are slightly
curved are formed of a stiff card which will hold its shape when bent
into position. These may be attached to the main stick by inserting an
edge into a groove in the stick and glueing in place. It is not well to
construct these more than six inches in width over all.

One of the simplest monoplanes to construct is formed of a broad
rectangular forward plane with a fan-shaped stability-plane at the
rear (Plate 5). This is a French model which is said to have flown
long distances; that is to say, 300 feet or more. It has several
very interesting features. In the first place the combined area of
its planes is doubtless greater than that of any other model here
described. The vertical rudder which looks very shipshape and effective
is very easy to build and the frame illustrates several new principles.

The frame or motor-base may be made of heavy dowel sticks or light
lath as indicated in the photograph. It will be found simpler to
avoid tapering the frame at the rear by merely constructing a stout
rectangular base with a length two and one half times its width. The
forward plane is slightly bowed or flexed. It will be found a good
plan to construct the frame for the base and then bow a light strip at
either end against the edge. By fastening the covering to these curved
strips a smooth curved surface may be obtained.

The rear stability-plane may be stretched over a fan-shaped frame of
strips or lath which is in turn fastened to the motor-base. Another
plan is to attach the front and rear edges of the plane, the rear one
being slightly longer, and stretch the covering over these leaving the
sides free as in the photograph of the accompanying model. The vertical
rudder is very simple, consisting of a piece of dowel stick sunk in the
rear frame to which a rectangular piece of cloth is attached the front
corner being pulled taut.

The spread of the planes appears to be considerably greater than needs
be. Since the front plane is flexed it may be reduced one third or
even one half in depth without reducing its lifting quality; although
in this case it should be placed nearer the stability plane. This
reduction would, of course, make an important saving in the weight of
the craft. So large a model calls for two propellers which will prove
more effective at the front rather than the rear of the machine. It
might be well to carry the motors further back than has been done in
this model thus gaining additional power.

Since the model is expected to rise unaided from the ground the
question of the skids is very important. The design followed in the
model is excellent. The front of the frame is supported by legs
consisting of inverted triangles built of dowel sticks attached to the
frame. The axle connecting the two runs on small wheels, such as may be
borrowed from a toy automobile. The rear of the frame rests on a simple
skid made of curved reed. These supports place the model at an angle
which should enable it to rise easily without loss of power. There is
a great deal of satisfaction in working on so large a model, the parts
may be made stronger and there is less likelihood of its getting out of
order.

Now turn from these broad planes to the rather slight model (Plate 6),
and the faults of its proportion are at once obvious. The front plane
is much too far back for stability. Such a model will glide fairly
well, and, if the motor be powerful it will rise quickly, but a steady
horizontal flight is out of the question. The size of the planes seems
perilously small, and yet if they be well shaped and spaced they will
prove large enough. This is just the sort of model a beginner is likely
to make, and therefore serves a very useful purpose in pointing a
lesson.

[Illustration: PLATE III. An Ingenious French Model Made of Umbrella
Wire.]

It is not without its good points. The front plane has been carefully
flexed and attached to the motor frame at a good angle. An interesting
experiment has also been made in carrying the edges of the front
plane a trifle behind the rear edge, thus making for stability. The
vertical rudder above the rear stability-plane is well placed, although
it appears rather small. The skids upon which the model rests and the
proportion of the front to the rear elevation are excellent. It is a
first rate plan in building such a model to attach the front plane
temporarily to the motor-base, and move it back and forth in the trial
flights until the best spacing has been found.



CHAPTER VII

ELABORATING THE MONOPLANE


It is surprising to find how far the pure monoplane form has been
developed by the builders of model aëroplanes. It is no exaggeration to
say that they have carried some principles of construction even further
than the builders of the large man-carrying monoplanes. Since a model
is so easily built, and costs so little, it is of course possible to
experiment with all sorts of new forms. A great many of these will
doubtless prove to be all wrong, but some are certain to be valuable
discoveries. In future years, when the aëroplane has been perfected
and perhaps plays an important part in commerce, sport and warfare it
will probably be possible to trace back many of its improvements to the
model aëroplanes designed, built and flown by American boys of to-day.

A beautiful model of a pure monoplane form carefully elaborated is
shown in Plate 7. In this case increased stability is obtained by
throwing out additional planes both to the front and rear. It may
appear at first glance that these stability-planes are very small
compared with the broad soaring-plane, but they have not proved so in
flight. It will be remembered that the elevating-plane of the Wright
machine is very small compared with the spread of the main wings.
There is besides a great advantage in placing the stability plane
well forward since it makes it possible to build an unusually long
motor-base and install longer and more powerful motors.

The main plane is one of the best examples of construction work to be
found among all these models. It is well proportioned and the curve has
been skilfully drawn. The plane is made unusually rigid by a series of
supports or braces run both horizontally and vertically. Such a plane
calls for considerable time and patience, but it will well repay the
builder by the long and steady flights it insures for the model. In
adding ribs to a large plane of this kind a convenient material may
be prepared by splitting up thin wooden plates or dishes, such as you
buy at the grocers for a penny. The strips obtained in this way may be
easily glued or tied to the edge of the plane and shaped as desired.

A long, straight flight is insured for this model by equipping it
with three vertical rudders or guiding-planes. The first rudder is
well placed above the front plane. The second performs a good service
beneath the main plane, while the third is carried unusually far back
behind the propellers. The problem whether a rudder is more effective
above or below the planes is very ingeniously solved in this case by
placing them in both positions. An interesting principle is involved
in placing the rear rudder. By fixing it far behind the center of
gravity of the model a considerable leverage is obtained, and a small,
light rudder becomes more effective in this position than a much larger
plane placed forward. These rudders are built so that they may be
easily turned from side to side and fixed rigidly at any angle.

[Illustration: PLATE IV. One of the Simplest of Aëroplanes to
Construct.]

Still another interesting feature of this model is the design of the
skids. The model is supported at an angle which enables it to rise
easily. These skids are besides arranged with shock-absorbers, simply
constructed with elastic bands, which enable them to take up the shock
on landing and thus protects the machine. This is an interesting field
of experiment and a little care in building these skids will save many
a smash-up.

It cannot be too often stated, that the supporting power of the planes
depends far more upon their shape than their size. A remarkably
effective model may be made with planes, which are little more than
blades (Plate 8). The planes, in this case, are made of white wood,
slightly curved. The front or entering edge is very sharp, while, at
the rear, a thin strip of shellaced silk is glued, thus forming a good
soaring blade. The front plane is a counterpart of the first, except
that it is smaller. The only stability plane is a thin, knife-like
strip placed vertically just before the rear plane. The model is
mounted on skids. It is driven by a small propeller placed far back of
the center of gravity. It is probably the easiest as it is the smallest
of all models to construct, and will fly for more than three hundred
feet.

In building this model it will be found a good plan to bend the strips
of wood for the planes by steaming them over a kettle. Allow the steam
to play on the under or concave side of the plane. When dry the plane
will retain its shape. The front or entering edge should be trimmed
away to a sharp line and sand-papered perfectly smooth. The front
corners of the planes should be slightly rounded while the rear edges
are kept straight. The forward plane should be tilted slightly upward
to enable it to rise, but at an angle of less than thirty degrees. The
secret of the remarkable flights of this model probably lies in the
smoothness of its planes and the absence of irregular parts which offer
a resistance to the air.

An interesting field of experiment, as yet almost untouched, lies in
the triangular, or narrow-prowed forms of aëroplanes (Plate 9). The
theory of this model is, that a triangle entering the air end-wise,
will meet with less resistance than when presenting a broad, entering
edge. The model is, frankly, an experiment, although it has been found
to have unexpected stability, and flies well. Its central planes,
joined at right angles, is supported by two, lateral, stability-planes,
radiating backward from the front of the model. The aëroplane is drawn,
not pushed, through the air, by double propellers, and is steered by
an angular guiding-plane at the rear. The planes are mounted upon a
triangular frame, which runs on wheels, two being set forward and
one aft. The planes, taking advantage of the dihedral angle, seem
to rest upon the air, which makes for stability. In actual practice,
however, the planes in this particular model have been found to be too
narrow. The question naturally arises as to the effect of reversing
this model and turning the dihedral angle of the central plane, into a
tent effect. As a matter of actual experience, the model flies almost
equally well upside down.

In many of the early attempts to build aëroplanes the wings or planes
were tilted sharply upward from the center thus forming what is known
as a dihedral angle. This form served to lower the center of gravity
and, it was thought, made for stability. The Wright Brothers found that
this plan, although it lowered the center of gravity, caused it to move
from side to side like a pendulum, and therefore abandoned it in favor
of the flat curved wing which have been so generally imitated. Now this
model returns to the old principle of the dihedral model, but treats
it in a new way. By building the model with three planes, each with
the dihedral angle, the center of gravity has been lowered and, at the
same time, the oscillation has been greatly reduced.

[Illustration: PLATE V. Too Large for Beginners, but Will Make Long
Flights.]

The narrow-prowed form of this model is also very interesting and
its principle may well be copied. All of the successful monoplanes
aloft to-day, the Bleriot, Santos Dumont, Antoinette and others are
driven with their larger or soaring planes forward and their smaller
stability-planes in the rear. The day may come when these machines
will be reversed. The model before us may point the way to a great
improvement in the building of air-craft. It is an important principle
for the builder of model aëroplanes to bear in mind.

In the present state of model aëroplane building, the longest flights
are made with an adaptation of the monoplane forms. An excellent model
is shown in Plate 10. The dihedral, or V shape of the planes gives them
greater supporting power than others in the horizontal position. The
stability plane beneath is particularly recommended, since it utilizes
the frame already in position and does not add to the weight of the
model. The rear of this plane, which is hinged, is easily adjusted.

The planes of this model are especially interesting. They are made of
silk, laid over frames of dowel sticks, and each pair is held tightly
together by the simple device of connecting them with elastic bands,
attached to clasps. The wires running to the corners of the planes,
are fastened to small brass rings which may be slipped over the sticks
or posts in the center of the frame, which makes them very simple to
adjust. It will be noticed that the rear part of each plane swings
freely, and is kept in place only by corset steels, used as ribs, which
are sewn into the cloth. These floating or soaring blades, as they are
sometimes called, insure longer flights.

With such a model there is little danger of building a too powerful
motor. By increasing the size of the wings, and careful weighting,
a surprising amount of power may be applied to such a model without
rendering it unstable. This is of course a great advantage in such a
model, since it lends itself to longer flights and the installation of
comparatively heavy motors. When you find yourself with a model of this
design in good working order, experiment by binding the wings or planes
at the middle to form an arched surface like the wings of a sea gull.
The flying radius of some of these models has been increased fully
fifty per cent by this simple expedient.

An interesting modification of this form (Plate 11) is provided with
rigid wings, and is driven by a single propeller. The very simple but
effective method of bracing the wings, may be studied to advantage.
The skids are well designed. In still another type of this general
monoplane form (Plate 12) the propeller is placed in front of the
planes, and the rubber motor runs below the main bar. The wheels
supporting this model are particularly well made.

A very serviceable, little monoplane form may be made by making the
rear upper plane adjustable (Plates 13-14). The front plane is V-shaped
and is unusually stable for so light a model. By tilting the rear plane
up or down, a good level flight may be obtained. The frame, in this
case, is made of wire. The propeller is placed well behind the rear
plane, thus bringing the center of gravity well forward to balance
the angle of the rear plane. The blades of the propeller are made of
twisted wood, which is not to be recommended, since it is likely to
lose its shape.

In Plates 15-16 we have a well thought out little monoplane, which well
repays study. The propeller is set forward of the lifting plane which
is the larger of the wings. The rear plane may be tilted up or down.
The rudder, which is also adjustable, is set below it. The arrangement
of skids is excellent, enabling it to rise from the ground with little
loss of friction. The method of flexing the front plane may well be
imitated.

[Illustration: Model shown in Plate V. Ready for a Flight.]

A good working idea of the aëroplane is clearly shown by the builder
of the biplane with triangular wings (Plate 17). His model is not
successful and will not fly, yet it embodies several good features. The
biplane form of the lifting plane is excellent in itself as we have
seen in earlier models. The spacing of the two planes is good, and the
bracing of the model throughout is well planned. The triangle does not
make a good soaring plane even when its broad side is made the entering
edge. The triangle serves well enough however for the rear stability
plane. The chief fault of the model is that it is much too large. The
motor although well proportioned is much too weak to propel so large a
frame.

An interesting variation from the common type of aëroplane is made
by varying the angle of the sides of the planes (Fig. 18). Here is a
well constructed model, and, with a single exception, fairly well
proportioned. The mistake, and it is likely to prove a serious one, is
in the size of the vertical rudders. They are well placed above the
main plane, but their size is likely to defeat the purpose for which
they were designed and knock the model off its course rather than
keep it steady. It is a question again if one of these rudders would
not serve the purpose better than two and thus minimize weight and
resistance.

The best point of this model is the ingenious method of enlarging the
surface of the planes without increasing the size of the planes or
adding to their weight. This is done by cutting the covering of the
planes at an angle and keeping the entire surface taut by bracing. It
is of course very important that the cloth should be held tight without
wrinkling. The plan of having the wings taper slightly outward is good.
Such a model combines more lifting surface with less weight than any
other model of this general group.



CHAPTER VIII

BUILDING A BIPLANE


Every one knows, of course, that the box-kite flies better than a plane
surface, and many believe that the box or cellular type of aëroplane
has a similar advantage over the monoplane. The enclosed end keeps the
air from slipping off the edges of the plane, and makes for stability.
There is all the difference in the world, or rather in the air, between
an actual flight and the movement of a model aëroplane. The aviator,
by flexing his planes, and adjusting his rudders fore and aft, may
balance his craft to suit the air currents. In the model aëroplane,
the adjustment must be made before starting once and for all. Several
interesting principles are involved in the cellular or box form of
aëroplanes which will well repay study (Plates 19-20).

In disturbed air, which is of course the usual condition of the
atmosphere, the cellular model is likely to be deflected, and since
the elevating plane or planes cannot be adjusted, it will soon fall
off its course. Such models are easy to construct, and any one who has
built a monoplane will have little difficulty with them. No attempt
is made to flex the planes. The cellular type must be equipped with a
lifting-plane forward, which may be easily adjusted to any angle, and
held in position. It is indispensable that you have two propellers
placed aft behind the main plane. The model may be made much more
effective by adding a third stability-plane or rudder at the rear. It
may be either vertical or horizontal and should be easily adjusted.
The models illustrated, herewith, are very simple forms and clearly
indicate the necessary frame work. It will be found that these models
require considerable ballast, skilfully distributed.

[Illustration: PLATE VI. A Model with Both Good and Bad Features.]

In building these cellular forms select some light lath for the frame
rather than dowel sticks. It will be necessary to join many of these
together at right angles, and the curved stick will be found difficult
to work. For each box cut four sticks the desired width, and eight
sticks the depth of your plane. The box should be almost exactly square
so that all these shorter sticks should be the same length. Now build
your box by nailing and glueing these sticks together, taking great
pains to have it symmetrical. Should a single one of these sticks be
too long or too short it will throw the entire frame out of plumb and
make it next to impossible to get a straight flight.

In most of these models the front or rear stability-planes are made
exactly like the larger frame only much smaller. When the frames are
completed and thoroughly dry and smooth, stretch the cloth covering
tightly over them by drawing it lengthwise, all the way around. By
using a single piece of cloth it will be found easier to pull it
together and hold it tight and smooth. It will be found a good plan
to touch the outer edges of the frame you are covering with glue just
before covering. When the glue dries the cloth will thus be held firmly
in position. The cloth may be fastened to the outer edges by glueing or
sewing.

A simple but effective plan for mounting the stability-planes is
suggested by the models here illustrated. The frame of the motor-base
may be made the width of the smaller frame and fastened between the
two sticks. It should be left free so that it may be tilted up or down
and fixed in any position. If the rear stability-plane is to serve as
rudder it should of course be mounted vertically so that it may be
turned to right or left. Be sure to make your frame sufficiently strong
and rigid. A light frame which will vibrate when the motor turns or is
shaken by the wind will be found very troublesome indeed.

The cylindrical forms of planes (Plate 21) carries the foregoing
principles a step further. A surprising degree of stability is
obtained by thus enclosing the air, and by throwing out several
lateral stability-planes fore and aft. The models may be constructed
of heavy wire, ordinary umbrella wire will answer the purpose, and
may be readily bent. The planes in the accompanying model are merely
suggestive. The broad planes placed forward, well above the diameter,
promise well, but the rear wings appear unstable and small for the
other surface. The forward or lifting-plane is again, much too narrow.
The cylindrical form is equipped with a double propeller, one before
and the other in the rear, both mounted on a bar, which forms the exact
axis of the cylinder. This adjustment will give you a very pleasant
surprise. The vibration and torque of the two propellers seem to
equalize one another, and the thrust is much more steady than in the
case of a single screw. The thrust is not only double, in this way, but
the gain for stability is surprising. The model should be mounted on
skids to assist it in rising, and to take up the force of the impact
on landing.

The double propeller, mounted on the same shaft, may be used
successfully in many models. A very simple monoplane form (Plate 22)
may be equipped in this way. If two or more planes be mounted between
the propellers, an astonishing soaring quality may be had. It is an
excellent plan to fasten the planes to the frame at first by rubber
bands, so that they may be pushed up or down readily, and adjusted and
weighted to suit the conditions.

There is danger in this form, however, that the plane will turn
completely over in its flight, although this will have little effect
upon the thrust or direction. The model is exceedingly simple to
make. The propellers should not be too large, not more than twice the
diameter of the planes at most. The two propellers must, of course, be
turned in opposite directions, to correct the twisting tendency.

[Illustration: PLATE VII. A Good Example of Careful Designing and
Workmanship.]

Should you construct a motor-base of this kind with propellers at
either end it will be found interesting to experiment by attaching
planes of different shapes and sizes. It requires very little surface
to keep such a monoplane afloat. Instead of the circular and elliptical
plane placed lengthwise, as in the accompanying model, try the effect
of larger circles and broader ellipses, placing the latter sideways.
This may be varied by using small rectangular planes with the corners
rounded off. Sooner or later you will hit upon a shape of plane and a
spacing which will give you good, steady flights of surprising length.

It has been suggested that a good motor-base be built with double
propellers and the various forms of planes tested out upon it. Let us
carry this idea further and, now that we have had some experience in
building aëroplane models, construct a quadruple motor-base; that is a
motor-base with four strands of rubber bands and four propellers, two
forward and two aft. The four would of course have to be very nicely
balanced. The two sets of propellers if carefully set up would tend
to correct one another, as we have seen in the cylindrical and other
double propellers thus giving a very steady flight. The increased speed
of such a motor would carry any good model at a much higher rate of
speed than any of the present forms.

There is a very simple rule to be remembered in building all
biplanes, regarding the spacing of the planes. The distance between
the super-imposed planes should always be equal to the width of the
planes themselves. A beautiful model (Plate 23) is here reproduced,
to show how not to space your planes. In all other respects the model
is excellent. The planes themselves are beautifully constructed and
scientifically curved. It is interesting to note, in this case, that
the front and rear sets of planes would be much too far apart were
they flat surfaces, but being flexed as they are, their supporting
power is greatly increased. By placing them so far apart, a longer and
more powerful motor may be used. The rudders, both fore and aft, are
adjustable, and appear very effective and shipshape.

The method of tuning up the planes in this model is especially to be
recommended. From a post, placed at the center of the planes, wires
are run to the corners which holds the frame perfectly taut. For the
main frame, or backbone, a metal tube has been used which greatly adds
to the appearance of the model. This aluminium tubing may be bought
cheaply and will serve admirably for this purpose.

The most popular of all models, among amateur aëronauts in America, at
least, is the Wright machine (Plates 24-25). The opinion is ventured
that this is due more to the attractiveness of its lines and the pride
we all take in its wonderful achievements, than to its actual flying
ability as a model. The most perfect of these models will rarely fly
more than a hundred feet. They will be found exceedingly difficult
to weight and adjust so that they will maintain their course in a
disturbed air current.

The planes of these models are usually made separate from the motor
base. The shafts of the propellers, with the rubber motors and skids,
are built up in a single piece. This plan has the advantage of making
the planes adjustable so that they may move backward or forward as
desired. The model leaves the ground from a base, much the same as the
rail used by the large Wright machines. Some models are even started by
the propulsion of a rubber band attached to the frame, which is pulled
back and released, like the old-fashioned sling shot.

[Illustration: PLATE VIII. An Effective Model with Wooden Wings.]



CHAPTER IX

COMBINING MONOPLANE AND BIPLANE FORMS


Although the regular biplane form is exceedingly difficult to manage
in small models, there is great advantage in combining it with the
monoplane forms (Plate 26). The biplane makes an excellent lifting
plane, and when the model combines with it a broad monoplane for
stability, surprisingly long flights may be made. The model here
illustrated has flown 218 feet 6 inches.

Despite its size, the model is exceedingly light. It is made almost
entirely of dowel sticks braced with piano wire. Still another
advantage of the biplane form is the action of the supporting surface
when it comes to descend. The model settles easily to the ground, in
contrast to many monoplane models which come down with a dislocating
shock. The skids of this model are simple and effective. In a model of
this form it is obviously best to have the propellers drive rather than
pull it.

An ingenious young aëronaut has reversed the above order and placed his
biplane in the rear, using the monoplane for lifting (Plate 27). His
model is unusually large, having a spread of four feet. The biplane is
square, with lateral stability planes on either side. The elevating
planes appear small in proportion, but they serve to keep the craft on
an even keel. The most striking feature of this model is its extreme
lightness. Although unusually large, it weighs but nine ounces. The
frame, except for the braces is built of reed. The planes are covered
with parchment. The model is driven by two rather small propellers. The
position of the propellers will appear, at first glance, to be rather
low, but it must be remembered that the extreme lightness of the model
brings the center of gravity very far down. The model has flown more
than two hundred feet.

[Illustration: PLATE IX. An Interesting Experiment Along New Lines.]

The stability of the models thus combining the monoplane and biplane
forms comes as a surprise. Both the models in question rise easily from
the ground, which is more than can be said of many aëroplanes big or
little, and once aloft maintain a steady horizontal flight, which is
still more unusual. An interesting field of experiment is suggested
by these combinations. These successful experiments have been made
with perfectly flat planes. Suppose now we try them out with flexed
planes. If the stability thus gained may be combined with the increased
soaring quality of the curved plane, we may be on the way to making
some remarkable flights. In the summer of 1909 a number of boys built
and flew model aëroplanes in New York, when many interesting and well
constructed models were brought out, and the longest flight was only
sixty feet. Less than one year later the same boys succeeded in flying
their machines for more than two hundred feet. The new models were no
larger, the motors no more powerful, but the machine had become more
shipshape and efficient. It is reasonable to suppose that each year
will bring a similar advance.



CHAPTER X

FAULTS AND HOW TO MEND THEM


Your model, perhaps a beautiful one, finished in every part, may twist
and tip about as soon as it is launched and quickly dart to the ground.
The fault is likely to be in the propeller, being too large for the
size and weight of the machine. This may be remedied by adding a weight
to the front of the machine, by wiring on a nut or piece of metal.
Should this fail to steady the aëroplane, the propeller must be cut
down.

When your propeller is too small the machine will not rise from the
ground, or, if launched in the air, will quickly flutter to earth. If
the model on leaving your hand, with the propeller in full motion,
fails to keep its position from the very start, the blade should be
made larger. There is no use in wasting time and patience over the
machine as it is.

Many a beginner, with mistaken zeal, constructs a too powerful motor.
The power in this case turns the propeller too swiftly for it to grasp
the air. It merely bores a hole in the air and exerts little propelling
force. An ordinary motor when wound up one hundred and fifty turns
should take about ten seconds, perhaps a trifle longer, to unwind. It
is a good plan to time it before chancing a flight.

Bad bracing is another frequent source of trouble. The planes should
be absolutely rigid. Test your model by winding up your motor and
letting it run down while keeping the aëroplane suspended, by holding
it loosely in one hand. If the motor racks the machine, that is, if the
little ship is all a-flutter and the planes tremble visibly, the entire
frame needs tuning up. It is impossible for an aëroplane to hold its
course if the planes are in the least wabbly. The braces should be
taut. A loose string or wire incidentally offers as much resistance to
the air as a wooden post.

The flight of your model aëroplane should be horizontal, with little
or no wave-motion. Your craft at first may rise to a considerable
height, say fifteen or twenty feet, then plunge downward, right itself,
and again ascend, and repeat this rather violent wave-motion until it
strikes the ground. To overcome this, look carefully to the angle or
lift of your front plane or planes and to the weighting.

The explanation is very simple. As the aëroplane soars upward, the air
is compressed beneath the planes, and this continues until the surface
balances, tilts forward, and the downward flight commences. Your planes
should be so inclined that the center of air-pressure comes about one
third of the distance back from the front edge. The center of gravity
of each plane, however, should come slightly in front of the center of
pressure. After all, the best plan is to proceed by the rule of thumb,
and tilt your planes little by little, and add or lessen the weight in
one place or another, until the flight is horizontal and stable.

If your aëroplane does not rise from the ground, but merely slides
along, the trouble is likely to be in your lifting plane. Tilt it a
trifle and try again. The simplest way to do this is to make the front
skids higher than those at the back. If the front skids are too high,
the plane will shoot up in the air and come down within a few feet.

The most carefully constructed model is likely to go awry in the early
flights. The propeller seems to exert a twist or torque, as it is
called, which sends it to the right or left, or up or down, even in
a perfectly undisturbed atmosphere. It is assumed that your model is
symmetrical. An aëroplane not properly balanced, which is larger on one
side than the other, or in which the motor is not exactly centered,
cannot, of course, be expected to fly straight. However, to be on the
safe side, go all over the machine again. Measure its planes to see
that the propeller is in the center. Hold it up in front of you right
abeam, and test with your eye if the parts be properly balanced.

If it still flies badly askew, flex the planes by bending the ends
up or down very slightly by tightening or loosening the wire braces
running to the corners. At the same time add a little weight to
counteract the tipping tendency. A nut or key may be wired on the
edge which persists in turning up. It may require much more weight
than you imagine. The difference should begin to show at once. Even
after a model appears to work fairly well as a glider, the addition of
the motor may so change the center of gravity that it will “cut up”
dreadfully.

It will be well to leave your planes loose so that they may be shifted
back and forth and not fasten them till you have tried out the
motor. If you followed the plan suggested of fastening the plane to
the central frame by crossing rubber bands over it, you can easily
adjust them. If the model tends to fly upward at a sharp angle, slide
the front plane forward an inch, and try another flight. There is an
adjustment somewhere which will give the model the steady, horizontal
flight you are after.

Some models will refuse to rise and swing around in an abrupt circle
the moment the motor is turned on. This may be caused by the propeller
being much too small for the motor. After looking over all the
photographs of the models shown in these pages you will gain an idea of
the proper proportion, and be able to tell offhand if the propeller is
out of proportion. A small propeller revolving very rapidly, or racing,
is likely to give the model a torque, even if it be otherwise well
proportioned. Don’t try to remedy this with rudder surfaces, but change
your propeller, or your motor, or both.

[Illustration: PLATE X. An Excellent Monoplane Capable of Long Flights.]

When your aëroplane turns in long, even curves to one side or the
other, look to your rudder surface. Turn it to one side or the other,
just as you would in steering a boat. It is, of course, obvious that
it must be kept rigidly in position. If a slight turn of the rudder
does not straighten out the flight, you probably need more guiding
surface, and the rudder must be enlarged. If the model still continues
to turn away from a straight line, tilting as it does so, try a little
weight at the end of the plane which rises.

The commonest of all accidents to aëroplane models is the smashing up
of the skids on landing. A model will frequently rise to a height of
fifteen or twenty feet, and the shock of a fall from such an elevation
is likely to work havoc in the underbody. There is no reason, however,
why your model should not come down as lightly as a bird from the crest
of the flight wave. The model, when properly proportioned, weighted,
or balanced, will settle down gradually and not pitch violently. It is
these quick darts to earth which cause the worst disasters.

A model should have sufficient supporting surface to break its fall
when the motor runs down, at any reasonable elevation. If the model
aëroplane falls all in a heap, as soon as the motor slows down, it
will be well to look to this and perhaps increase the size of your
planes. As a general rule, the biplanes or the models in which the
double planes have been used, either for lifting or soaring planes,
will settle down more gradually. The lateral planes, whatever their
position, also lend valuable support when the critical time comes in
the descent. Your model is not perfect until it falls easily at the end
of the flight.

[Illustration: Detail of Model Shown in Plate X.]

Under perfect condition, in absolutely undisturbed air, an aëroplane
may be made to come down so lightly that no bones, even the smallest,
will be broken. A gust of wind, however, may ruin all your calculations
and bring the aëroplane down with a dislocating shock. The skids must
be designed to meet extreme conditions, the worst that can possibly
befall. It has been pointed out that these skids or supports should be
high enough to give the propeller clearance so that the propeller
blades will not touch the ground. By using a light flexible cane for
the purpose, and bending them under, a spring may be formed which will
take up the shock of a violent landing. Some builders go further and
rig up the skids with braces of rubber bands to increase this cushion
effect. A variety of constructions are shown in the photographs of the
various models. Your skids should enable your model to withstand any
ordinary shock of landing, without breakage of any kind.

The life of your motor can be greatly increased by careful handling.
The rubber strands are likely to be worn away against the hooks at
either end. The wire used for the hooks should be as heavy as possible
to keep it from cutting through. Be careful that the wire which comes
in contact with the rubber is perfectly smooth and flawless. A little
roughness or a spur on the wire will soon cut through the rubber. It is
a good plan to slip a piece of rubber tubing tightly over the hook and
loop the rubber bands of your motor over this cushion.

The first break in the rubber bands is likely to come near the center
of the strand. A number of loose ends appear. The broken ends should
be knotted neatly and the loose ends cut away. If the strands come
in contact with any part of the motor base, a breaking will quickly
follow, and your strands soon become covered with a fringe of loose
ends. Be careful to tie up all loose ends and trim them away, since
the ends in twisting serve to break other strands. Although the finer
strands of rubber give the greater thrust, do not buy them too small,
since they are easily broken.

[Illustration: PLATE XI. A Well Thought Out Monoplane.]

The length of your motor base beyond the front plane should be
carefully calculated. It is very easy, of course, to run your shaft
too far forward. The center of gravity is easily shifted in this way,
and your model soon becomes unmanageable. An aëroplane with this fault
will not rise, but merely pitches forward under the thrusts of the
motor. It is almost useless to attempt to balance this by weighting the
machine. The front plane should be placed further forward, and if the
lifting surface does not seem sufficient, cut away the front of your
motor base, once for all. A too short motor base, on the other hand,
will cause your model to shoot upward at a sharp angle, and waste much
valuable propelling power before it rights itself and takes a regular
horizontal flight.

In the model aëroplane there is only one point where friction affects
the flight, namely, along the propeller shaft. One can hardly be too
careful in the construction of the axle. The thrust of the rubber at
best, is limited, and this power must be exerted without loss of any
kind. A faulty propeller shaft will use up a surprising amount of
energy. Your rubber motor should unwind to within one or two turns.

Bear in mind that one of four things is likely to be responsible for
your trouble. The planes may not be properly placed on the frame, they
may not be properly flexed, they are not set at the proper angle of
elevation, or your motor is at fault. Watch these points, and you
will soon have your machine under perfect control. In the extremely
complicated models it is often difficult to locate the fault. Build
your model so that these parts may be adjusted in a moment without
taking apart. After you have built an aëroplane model, even a very
simple one, the pictures of other aëroplanes will have a new meaning
for you. Every new model you see will give you some new idea. A number
of the most successful aëroplane models in the country are shown in the
accompanying photographs. Study these carefully, and you will learn
more from them of practical aëroplane construction than from any amount
of reading.



PART II

THE HISTORY AND SCIENCE OF AVIATION



CHAPTER I

THE FIRST FLYING MACHINES


The conquest of the air was not won by a happy accident of invention.
Long before man learned to fly the science of aviation had to be
created by investigation and experiment. At first with very crude
attempts, a great many flying machines had to be built, and many lives
sacrificed in flying them. The exact nature of the invisible air
currents and the action of wings and planes, were to be learned before
the delicate mechanism of the modern aëroplane was possible. Probably
no other great invention has required such long and patient preparation.

In many ways the aëroplane is therefore a greater achievement than the
steam engine or the steamboat. When Watt turned from watching his tea
kettle to build his engine, he applied mechanical principles which
had long been in actual use, and there were many experienced mechanics
to help him. Robert Fulton, again, when he set up his engine, found
the science of boat-building highly developed. The aviator had no such
advantage. He must first of all build a craft which would keep afloat
in the most unstable of mediums. A motive power had to be applied
to suit these conditions, and the two must be so attuned that they
would work perfectly together when the least slip would mean instant
disaster. As we learn to realize these difficulties we will appreciate
more than ever how marvellous a creation is the modern aëroplane.

[Illustration: PLATE XII. A Good Example of Tilted Planes.]

Man has thought much about flying from the earliest times. The open
air has always seemed the natural highway, and flying machines were
invented hundreds of years before anyone dreamed of steamengines or
steamboats. The ancient Greeks long ago spun wonderful tales of the
mythical Daedalus and Icarus and their flight to the sun and back
again. The first practical aviator seems to have been a Greek named
Achytas, and we are told he invented a dove of wood propelled by heated
air. There is another ancient record of a brass fly which made a short
flight, so that we may be sure that even the ancients had their own
ideas about heavier-than-air machines.

As far as we may judge from these quaint old records the early aviators
attempted to fly with wings which they flapped about them in imitation
of birds. About the year 67 A. D., during the reign of the Emperor
Nero, an aviator named “Simon the Magician” made a public flight before
a Roman crowd. According to the record, “He rose into the air through
the assistance of demons. But St. Peter having offered a prayer, the
action of the demons ceased and the magician was crushed in a fall and
perished instantly.” The end of the account, which sounds very probable
indeed, is the first aëronautical smash-up on record.

Even in these early days the interest in aëronautics appears to have
been widespread. It is recorded that a British king named Baldud
succeeded in flying over the city of Trinovante, but unfortunately fell
and, landing on a temple, was instantly killed. In the eleventh century
a Benedictine monk built a pair of wings modelled upon the poet Ovid’s
description of those used by Daedalus, which was apparently a very
uncertain model. The aviator jumped from a high tower against the wind,
and, according to the record, sailed for 125 feet, when he fell and
broke both his legs. That he should have attempted to fly against the
wind, by the way, indicates some knowledge of aircraft.

If we may trust the rude folklore of the Middle Ages, the glider form
of airship which anticipated the modern aëroplane was used with some
success a thousand years ago. An inventor named Oliver of Malmesburg,
built a glider and soared for 370 feet, which would be a creditable
record for such a craft even in our day. A hundred years later a
Saracen attempted to fly in the same way and was killed by a fall. The
number of men who have given their lives to the cause of aviation in
all these centuries of experiment must be considerable.

Meanwhile the kite and balloon had long been in use in China. There
is no reason to doubt that kites were well understood and even put to
practical use in time of war as early as 300 B. C. A Chinese general,
Han Sin, is said to have actually signalled by kites to a beleaguered
city that he was outside the walls and expected to lend assistance.
And a French missionary visiting China in 1694 reported that he had
seen the records of the coronation of the Emperor Fo Kien in 1306 which
described the balloon ascensions that formed part of the ceremony.

The fifteenth century was the most active period in aëronautical
experiments before our own. A number of intelligent minds worked at
the problem and notable progress was made, although all fell short of
flying. Even in the light of our present knowledge of aëronautics we
must admire the thorough, scientific way the aviators went about their
work five centuries ago. Many of their discoveries have been of great
assistance to our modern aviators. Had these investigators possessed
our modern machinery, of which they knew little or nothing, it is, very
likely they would actually have flown.

One of the greatest of these investigators was Leonardo da Vinci,
famous as architect and engineer as well as painter and sculptor. To
begin at the beginning of the subject, he dissected the bodies of many
birds and made careful, technical drawings to illustrate the theory
of the action of wings. These drawings and descriptions are still
preserved, and even to-day repay careful study. He also calculated with
great detail the amount of force which would be necessary to drive such
machines. Plans were prepared for flying machines of the heavier than
air form to be driven by wings, and even by screw propellers, which
was looking far into the future.

[Illustration: PLATE XIII. A Serviceable Form Made of Wire.]

Among all these early experiments the best record of actual flight was
made by Batitta Dante, a brother of the great Italian poet. In 1456
Dante flew in a glider of his own construction for more than 800 feet
at Perugia in Italy and a few years later he succeeded in flying in the
same glider over Lake Trasimene. The glides made by the Wright Brothers
while perfecting their machines seldom reached this length.

For several centuries it was believed that a lifting screw, if one
could be built, would supply enough lifting power to support a heavier
than air machine. Da Vinci experimented along this line for many years
and even built a number of models with paper screws. This form of
flying machine is called the helicopter. The plan was then abandoned
for nearly five centuries and revived in our own century. The record of
all the aviators and their experiments would fill many volumes.

The belief that man could learn to fly by flapping wings up and down
was not given up until very recently. Nearly all the early machines
were built on this principle. Man can never fly as the birds do because
his muscles are differently grouped. In the birds the strongest
muscles, the driving power, are in the chest at the base of the wings
where they are most needed. It is amusing to find that while the birds
are always flying before our eyes no one has guessed their secrets.
Many attempts have been made to wrest their secrets from them by
attaching dynometers to their wings to measure the force of the muscles
but little has been learned in this way. One scientist calculated that
a goose exerts 200 horse power while another investigator figured out
that it was one tenth of one horse power. Many of the theories of
flight have been quite as far apart. A great variety of false notions
about flying had to be tried and from all these failures man slowly
learned the road he must follow.



CHAPTER II

DEVELOPING THE AEROPLANE


The opening of the twentieth century found the world well prepared for
actual conquest of the air. Aviation has been developed to an exact
science. It had taken centuries of failure to teach man that he could
not fly by flapping his wings like the birds but the idea was at last
abandoned. The birds were still the models of the heavier-than-air
machines, but man had at last learned to study them more intelligently.
The marvellous development of modern mechanics, especially the building
of light and efficient motors, was also of great importance. The theory
of the aëroplane was rapidly gaining in favor.

It was thought at one time that since no birds weighed more than fifty
pounds no flying machine heavier than this could ever fly. Some years
ago Hiram S. Maxim pointed out, however, that if we had built our steam
engines to imitate the horse, as we then hoped to build flying machines
like the birds, we would have built locomotives which weighed only
five tons, the weight of an elephant, which walked five miles an hour.
The secret of flight evidently did not lie in closely imitating the
familiar forms of flight. So far as man was interested it lay clearly
in the soaring flights. When a bird flies with extended wings it does
two things. It forms an aëroplane which supports its body, much the
same as a kite, and it operates a propeller for driving this aëroplane
forward. And so men finally learned to fly by borrowing a single
principle from the birds.

It is claimed by some that the theory, and largely the form, of the
modern successful aëroplane was first suggested by an English inventor,
Sir George Cayley, as early as 1796. Cayley argued that a flat plane
or surface when driven through the air inclined slightly upward would
lift a considerable weight. He also suggested that a tail would help
to steady the plane as well as steer it upward or downward. His ideas
of propelling the aëroplane by screws driven by motors was also far in
advance of his time, but the engines then in existence were much too
heavy for the purpose and he never built a model.

Fifty years later, when the steam engine had been highly developed,
these old plans were remembered and two engineers, Hensen and
Stringfellow, actually built a flying machine on Cayley’s principles.
This early aëroplane was of the monoplane form, made of oiled silk
stretched over a frame of bamboo. A car to carry a steam engine, and
presumably the passengers, was hung below this plane. The motive power
was supplied by two propellers at the rear. The aëroplane carried a
fan-shaped tail with a rudder for steering it sideways, placed beneath.
The model is said to have actually flown for a short distance, but
proved to be unstable.

From this time onward the experiments became more scientific and
accurate. Reliable scientific data was accumulated which later enabled
the aviators to build practical aëroplanes. A number of interesting
experiments were made shortly afterward by a scientist named Wenham to
prove that the lifting powers of a carrying surface might be increased
by arranging small surfaces in tiers one above another. Wenham had
watched the birds to some purpose, and decided that a single plane,
large enough to support a man would be too large to control, but that
a number of small surfaces would make the bird flight possible. Wenham
built and patented a machine in 1866. He never flew but he collected a
great deal of valuable information about the behavior of planes.

[Illustration: PLATE XIV. The Under Body of the Monoplane Shown, Plate
XIII.]

The slow, but on the whole, encouraging movement toward the successful
flying machine was given a serious set back in 1872 by a book written
by H. Von Humboldt announcing the result of his experiments. This
well known scientist, whose name carried great weight, wrote that
mechanical flight was impossible. He based his idea on the discovery
that as the body increased in size the work or power required to lift
it increased more rapidly than the size of the body. In other words,
a very large bird or flying machine could not contain muscles strong
enough or machinery strong enough to enable it to fly. He argued that
no bird larger than the albatross, for instance, had ever lived,
therefore no flying machines could ever be more than toys. The book was
so discouraging that many aviators gave up their experiments and the
science of aviation stood still.

It may be said to have been awakened, however, by the German scientist,
Otto Lilenthal, whose book, published in 1886, at once attracted world
wide attention. It was this book, incidentally, which inspired the
Wright Brothers to begin their experiments. Lilenthal was not only a
great scientist, but he worked on the principle that an ounce of actual
experience was worth a ton of theory. In aviation, where the weight is
all important, this saving was naturally of the greatest importance.
Lilenthal built gliders, many of them, and put to actual test the
theories which others had merely talked and figured about. Finally he
set up an engine on a glider but the machine turned over and he was
instantly killed. The scientific information he collected, however,
proved of the highest value to those who later actually conquered the
air.

Lilenthal built a hill fifty feet in height and shaped like a cone
with sides slanting at an angle of thirty degrees. Here he proved by
actual tests that he might fly no matter which way the wind blew and
that an arched surface, driven against the wind, would rise from the
ground and support his weight. A great deal of scientific information
was collected and tabulated as well as the exact effect of the pressure
of the air. He also changed the shape of the gliding surfaces, making
them very long and narrow and driving them edgewise as in the first
form of aëroplane. The aëroplane took shape in his hands. The success
of these experiments encouraged aviators in many countries to imitate
him, and so great was the interest aroused that even his fatal accident
in 1896 did not discourage them. The successful flying machine was now
actually in sight.

[Illustration: PLATE XV. A Simple Model which Proves Steady in Flight.]

For a time it was believed that Hiram S. Maxim would be the first to
construct a flying machine which would actually fly. He had gone about
the problem in a thoroughly scientific manner, sparing neither time nor
expense. An elaborate apparatus was first constructed like a revolving
derrick, to test accurately the lifting powers of various aëroplanes
of various sizes and shapes flying at different angles, as well as
the propelling force of many kinds of screws. The horizontal arm of
this machine was thirty feet, nine inches long, so that it described a
circle of 200 feet in circumference. The arm was driven by an engine at
high speed.

The various aëroplane forms to be tested were attached to the extreme
end of this arm, and driven by propellers of various shapes and sizes,
exactly as they would be in actual flight. Every part of the machine,
meanwhile, was so adjusted that the readings of the speed of the
aëroplane, its lifting power, the exact force of the propeller, in
fact, every detail, could be measured and recorded with scientific
accuracy. This preliminary work proved to be of the highest value. The
test showed, for instance, just what size the propeller should be for
different size planes, and the exact pitch of the screw which would
give the best results, the proper angle of elevation for the front
plane, the resistance offered by various shaped planes, and the exact
amount of power required for planes of different sizes. A delicate
machine was also built to test the different kinds of fabrics used for
covering the planes. The fabric was stretched over a small steel frame,
mounted at a slight angle, in a blast of air. The tendency of the cloth
to lift or drift was then accurately measured. The material which gave
the greatest amount of lift and the least drift was used.

A large aëroplane was finally built in 1893. It weighed 7500 pounds,
measured 104 feet in width, and was driven by a 360 horsepower engine.
Compared with the clear cut, ship-shape air-craft of to-day this early
model appears crude and cumbersome. The main plane was almost square
in shape, while stability planes extended out from the sides. A series
of four narrow planes, one above another, were carried below on either
side. The machinery for driving was carried far below the main plane.
The two large propellers were placed in the stern. The aëroplane was
run along a double-tracked railroad 1800 feet in length, to gather
sufficient momentum to cause it to rise. Almost any school-boy of
to-day familiar with the aëroplane models could have told at a glance
that the machine could not rise. When it was finally sent down the
track at a good clip, the front wheels did actually rise a trifle but
it immediately came down with a bad smash.

Not in the least discouraged, Maxim at once designed a new machine.
This measured fifty feet in width and forty feet in length in the
middle, but with the corners cut off, so that it was sharpened both
fore and aft. The wings were made long and narrow, extending out
twenty-seven feet beyond the main plane, and large fore and aft rudders
were attached. It was not even expected that the machine would fly. All
that was hoped for was that it would lift somewhat so that its upward
tendency might be accurately measured.

The most successful “flight” of this model will seem a very tame affair
indeed to the boys of to-day who are daily reading of the marvellous
voyages in air across sea and land. The “airship” was run over its
track and the steam pressure run up to 329 pounds per square inch. The
speed increased and the upward thrust began to be felt. Finally the
front wheels of the machine actually lifted from the track. The
rear axle rose three or four feet above its normal position. When it
alighted, the delighted aëronauts found that the wheels of the machine
had passed over the turf for a very short distance, without making any
marks, showing that for a second or so the machine was actually off the
earth. It seems curious to us to-day that this “flight” should have
been considered remarkable.

[Illustration: PLATE XVI. The Propeller and Shaft of the Model Shown,
Plate XV.]

The experiments carried out by S. P. Langley, beginning in 1887 and
lasting for four years, placed a great deal of valuable, scientific
data in the hands of the aviators. Thousands of tests were made
with an apparatus similar to that used by Maxim. In one class of
these experiments solid metal planes were attached to the end of the
revolving arm in such a way that they were free to fall for a fixed
distance. When in rapid, horizontal motion, the metal seemed to part
with its weight, and the material, though one thousand times heavier
than the air, was found to be actually supported by it. It was proven,
for instance, that one horse power would support over 200 pounds
weight of planes driven at a speed of fifty miles an hour.

All this preliminary work, or nearly all, we now see, was necessary
before a practical aëroplane could be constructed. The early aviators,
although they did not fly, at least showed what not to do, and several
paid the price of their lives for this knowledge. Lilenthal had mapped
out the aëroplane in the rough, and determined the general shape it
must take. The experiments of Maxim and Langley enabled the successful
aviators to calculate the size of the machine necessary to carry them
and the amount of power required to drive it.



CHAPTER III

THE WRIGHT BROTHERS’ OWN STORY


The Wright Brothers brought to their work a genius for invention and,
making free use of the results of former investigation and experiment,
finally succeeded in building a heavier than air machine which would
actually fly. The story of their experiments and final success, which
one may read in their own words, forms one of the most fascinating
chapters in the history of invention.

The Wright Brothers’ first flying machine was a mere toy. “Late in the
autumn of 1878” they tell the story, “our father came into the house
one evening with some object partially 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 for a while, and finally sank to
the floor. It was a little toy known to scientists as a ‘hélicoptère’
but which we, with sublime disregard for science, dubbed a bat. It was
a light frame of cork and bamboo 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.”

The interest of the brothers in aëronautics was awakened. “We began
building these hélicoptères ourselves,” their story goes on, “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
age.”

[Illustration: PLATE XVII. An Ingenious Model which Fails to Fly.]

The Wrights did not begin their experiments until the summer of 1896.
They first prepared themselves thoroughly by reading the literature on
aëronautics, making themselves familiar with the results of all the
experimental work of the aviators--Langley, Chanute, Mouillard, and
others. The Wrights soon decided that the first thing to be solved was
to build aëroplanes which would fly and that, until this was solved,
it was foolish to waste time building delicate and costly machinery to
operate them. They took up the problems of the glider and sought by
actual tests what many scientists had been theorizing about for years.

They soon discarded the various forms of gliders then used for
experiments. The tests which led up to adopting the now famous Wright
model, the basis for all heavier than air machines to-day, occupied
very little time. The story of this marvellous discovery which will
rank with that of Robert Fulton or Watt, is best told in their own
words, which are here somewhat abbreviated.

“The balancing of a flier may seem, at first thought, to be a very
simple matter,” say the Wrights, “yet almost every experimenter had
found in this the point he could not satisfactorily master. Many
different methods were tried. Some experimenters place the center
of gravity far below the wings in the belief that the wings would
naturally seek to remain at the lowest point. 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 action, 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. Notwithstanding the known limitations of this principle, it had
been embodied in almost every prominent flying-machine which had been
built.

“We reached the conclusion that such machines 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 flyer 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 aëroplanes 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.”

“Lilenthal 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 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 wind itself had disturbed.
This could easily be done by using wings capable of being warped,
and adjustable surfaces in the shape of rudders. A happy device was
discovered whereby the surfaces could be so warped that aëroplanes
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 features of our first glider.”

[Illustration: PLATE XVIII. A Good Model Excepting that its Vertical
Rudders Are Too Large.]

“We began our first 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 of from
fifteen to twenty 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.”

“The machine of 1901 was built with the shape of surface used by
Lilenthal, curved from front to rear, with a slight curvature of ⁴¹⁄₁₂
of its cord. But to make doubly sure that it would have sufficient
lifting capacity when flown as a kite in fifteen or twenty mile winds,
we increased the area from 165 square feet, used in 1900, to 308 square
feet, a size much larger than Lilenthal, Chanute, or Pilcher had deemed
safe. Upon trial, however, the lifting capacity again fell 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
pressure in general use were incorrect.”

“We then turned to gliding--coasting down hill in the air--as the
only method of getting the desired practice in balancing the machine.
After a few minutes’ practice we were able to make glides of 300
feet, and in a few days were safely operating in twenty-seven 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 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 experiments of 1901 were far from encouraging. 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 indistinguishable. 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.”

“To work intelligently, one needs to know the effects of a multitude
of variations that would 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 more 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.”

[Illustration: PLATE XIX. A Simple Cellular Form.]

“We had taken aëronautics merely as a sport. We reluctantly entered
upon the scientific side of it. But we soon 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, so varied
in design as to bring out the underlying causes of difference noted in
their pressure. Measurements were tabulated on nearly fifty of these at
all angles from zero to 45 degrees.

“In September and October, 1902, nearly one thousand flights were made,
several of which covered distances of over 600 feet. Some, made against
a wind of thirty-six 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, after 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.”

“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 proved
for a total weight of 600 pounds, including the operator and an eight
horsepower motor. But, upon completion, the motor gave more power
than had been estimated, and this allowed 150 pounds to be added for
strengthening the wings and other parts.

“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 and Langley.”

“The first flights with the power-machine were made on the 17th of
December, 1903. The first flight lasted only twelve 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 fifty-nine seconds, covering a
distance of 853 feet over the ground against a twenty-mile wind.”

“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,
when 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 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.

[Illustration: PLATE XX. A Cellular Type with Rudder and Elevating
Plane.]

“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 Kitty Hawk. When preparations had been
completed, a wind of 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 in 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 sixty feet, the machine came to the ground. Further trial was
postponed till the motor could be put in better running condition.

“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
flight, it could have been righted in an instant. In one flight, in
1905, while circling about a honey-locust tree at a height of about
fifty 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 ten or twelve feet from the
ground, and carried away several branches; but the flight, which had
covered a distance of six miles, was continued to the starting point.

“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
the 5th of October.

“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 (1908) that experiments
were resumed at Kill Devil Hill, North Carolina. The recent flights
were made to test the ability of our machines to meet the requirements
of a contract with the United States Government to furnish a flier
capable of carrying two men and sufficient fuel supplies for a flight
of 125 miles, with a speed of forty miles an hour. The machine used
in these tests was the 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 gasolene reservoirs of larger capacity
replaced those previously used.”

[Illustration: PLATE XXI. A Complicated Model Capable of Long Flights.]

Let us now take a short air journey with one of the Wright Brothers as
pilot. He describes the experience as follows, “Let us fancy ourselves
ready for the start. The machine is placed on 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 whirr. 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 fifty 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. The ground under you is at first a
perfect blur, but as you rise the objects become clearer. At a height
of one hundred 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 seem to
be moving at much higher speed, though you perceive no change in the
pressure of wind in 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 fifty or a hundred 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.”

On his return from Le Mans Mr. Wilbur Wright estimated that during a
single year he had flown upwards of 3000 miles. With the memory of
these marvellous flights in his mind he described his sensations to the
present writer with enthusiasm.

“Flying is the greatest sport in the world,” says Mr. Wilbur Wright. “I
can’t describe the sensation, I can only define it by comparison with
more familiar experiences. It is like sledding, like motoring, like
sailing, but with increased exhilaration and freedom.

“An aëroplane flight, contrary to the general impression, is far
steadier than the familiar means of locomotion. There is absolute
freedom from the bouncing of the automobile, the jar of a railroad
train, or the rolling and pitching sensations of the sea. No matter
how many springs or cushions may be added to the automobile, for
instance, there will always be some motion. On the other hand, the
seat of an aëroplane is always steady. The aëroplane does not jolt
over the invisible wind currents, the ruts of the sky. It cuts its way
smoothly. Even suppose the plane to be gliding so (indicating an angle
of forty-five degrees), the seat remains fixed. There is, of course,
no absolute parallel in surface travel. And since there is no roll or
pitch to the aëroplane, there is no air-sickness comparable to the
familiar sea sickness.”



CHAPTER IV

ABOARD THE WRIGHTS’ AIRSHIP


Seen high aloft the Wright aëroplane appears so graceful and fragile
that its actual dimensions come as a surprise. In the upper air it
seems no larger than a swallow, but, as it settles to earth, the wings
lengthen out to the width of an ordinary street.

There is some good reason for each stick and wire, and for every twist
and turn of the Wrights’ marvellous airship. When one considers what
wonderful feats this aircraft performs, its form and mechanism seem
extremely simple. It is far less complicated than any locomotive or
steamship, and the action of its planes is far easier to explain than
the sails of an ordinary seagoing ship. When one has once gone over the
fascinating little craft, all other aëroplanes, which more or less
resemble it, may be readily understood.

[Illustration: PLATE XXII. An Interesting Form which Flies Backward or
Forward.]

The Wright machine was not only the first power airship to fly and
carry a man aloft, but for all its rivals, it still rides the unstable
air currents more steadily than any other. The planes measure forty
feet from tip to tip, six and a half feet across, and are spaced six
feet apart. The distance between the planes is very important and was
only fixed after a number of experiments. The area of the wings or
supporting surfaces is 540 feet, which is considerably more than in
most airships. The machine complete, without any passenger or pilot,
weighs 880 pounds, although you would imagine it to be much less. The
two propellers measure eight feet in diameter, and turn at the rate of
450 revolutions a minute. Equipped with a four cylinder engine of from
25 to 30 horse power, the airship has a speed of forty miles an hour,
which is often increased when traveling with the wind.

The seats for the pilot and the passenger are placed at the center
at the front of the lower plane, so that their feet hang over the
front or entering edge. The passenger sits very comfortably throughout
the flight. There is a back to lean against, a brace for the feet,
while the struts between the planes give every opportunity to hold
on. In some of the models these seats are even upholstered in gray to
harmonize with the silver or aluminium paint of the machine.

A second and smaller biplane, which serves both as rudder and lifting
plane, extends about ten feet in front of the main planes. These two
planes, which have a combined area of eighty square feet, may be
inclined upward or downward by touching a lever at the pilot’s seat.
The motor, radiator and petrol or fuel tank are placed on the lower
plane in the center of the machine so that they balance the weight
of the pilot and the passenger. The weight of the lifting planes and
rudders rests on the main planes or lower deck.

[Illustration: PLATE XXIII. A Well Built Model Badly Proportioned.]

The most interesting feature of the Wrights’ airship is, of course,
the method for flexing the tips of the wings or planes to imitate the
flight of the birds. The ends of the large planes are made slightly
flexible, and may be turned up or down by moving a lever placed
convenient to the pilot’s hand. Both planes are flexed, or turned up
or down, at the same time the vertical rudder moves, so that, when
the aëroplane turns to right or left, the wings give the machine the
proper balance. If it were not for this arrangement, the ends of the
planes in turning would tend to rise, since they travel the faster, and
the machine would be in danger of upsetting. The ends of the planes
may also be flexed separately when the machine is in straight flight,
whenever it becomes necessary to balance it against a dangerous air
current or a gust of wind. The pilot, it will be seen, has every point
of the great machine, as it were, at his finger ends.

The marvellous power placed in the hands of the pilot of one of these
models makes him almost equal of the birds soaring about him. Let us
suppose an accident to occur. Even should the engine stop, the skillful
pilot is still master of the situation. He can actually coast down to
the ground on the air with comparative safety. Mr. Orville Wright has
soared up 3000 feet and, after stopping his propeller, slid down on
nothing at all, at the rate of more than twenty miles an hour, by the
force of gravity alone.

The Wright method of alighting is also borrowed from the birds. Watch
any bird alight on a twig, and you will see that it always settles on
the top of the twig, which is pressed straight down by its weight, and
never sideways. As the Wrights come down, they approach to within a
few feet of the earth, but, without touching they swoop up again, and
finally settle down from a height of only a few feet. Considering the
weight of their machine, they actually come down as lightly as a bird.
While traveling at a speed of forty miles an hour they will skid along
the ground or come to rest within five or six feet, so quietly that a
passenger cannot tell when he lands.

No part of the aëroplane calls for more clever workmanship than the
wings or planes. They must be so thin and light that they will ride
the air like the wings of a bird, and yet strong enough to support the
weight of hundreds of pounds of machinery and of passengers. In the
Wright model, the planes are made entirely of wood, but so ingeniously
braced that they are perfectly rigid. The building of such a wing is
especially difficult, since it must be curved with scientific accuracy.
In the Wright model machines, as in all aëroplanes, the curve is
upward, with the highest point of the arch near the front or entering
edge.

Both sides of the frame are completely covered so that they may offer
the least possible amount of resistance. There is not a ridge, scarcely
a seam, to catch the air. A stout canvas is used for covering. The
ingenuity of these clever workmen led them to lay on the cloth with
the thread running diagonally, at an angle of forty-five degrees. This
plan serves to hold the frame more closely together and keeps the cloth
from bagging or wrinkling.

At the first glance, the Wright machine appears to be made entirely
of aluminium. Seen high aloft in the sunlight, it appears like some
delicate jewel. The effect is due to the paint. The entire framework of
the machine is made of spruce pine except the curved part of the wings,
or entering edge, which is of ash. The propellers are driven by chains,
connected with the motor, which run in steel tubes, thus doing away
with the danger of fouling by passengers or loose objects. The ignition
system is operated by a high tension Eisenmann magneto machine. The
petrol used for fuel is carried in a tank placed above the engines and
is supplied by gravity. The two wings are connected by a series of
distance rods and wire cross-stays, which keep the entire front, or
entering edge, and central part of the model, perfectly rigid.

[Illustration: PLATE XXIV. A Wright Model Ready for Flight.]

Although nearly all the aëroplanes, nowadays, are mounted on ordinary
bicycle wheels, the Wrights prefer a simple system of skids, not unlike
the runners of a sleigh. One of the great advantages of the skids is
the fact that they take up the shock on landing more completely than
wheels and protect the machine from many a hard bump.

The airship rests on a small frame mounted on two wheels, placed
tandem, and is balanced on a small trolley which runs along a rail
about twenty-five feet in length. It is started by the pull of a rope
attached to a 1500 pound weight, which drops from a derrick fifteen
feet in height. When everything is ready, the temporary wheels are
taken away, the rope is attached, and finally the weight released. The
machine glides swiftly down the track, and when the necessary speed has
been reached, the pilot raises his elevating planes, a trifle, and the
ship glides gracefully upward and onward.



CHAPTER V

OTHER AEROPLANES APPEAR


In the summer of 1904 the boys of Paris were greatly interested in
watching a curious, giant kite in flight over the River Seine. The
string of this kite was drawn by a fast motor boat, which darted along,
while the kite rose high in the air. Its inventor tinkered with it,
and changed its wings about until it finally flew like no other kite
ever seen in France. All this was by no means mere play, however, for
many scientists watched the kite as it soared about and a great deal
of valuable information about the behavior of kites of this shape was
learned. The man with the kite, who soon became famous in the world of
aviation, was named Voisin. The aëroplane, which he afterwards built,
modeled on this kite, was flown in many remarkable flights by Henry
Farman, Delagrange, Paulhan, and others. Like the Wright airship,
Voisin’s is a biplane or double plane model.

Although at first glance, the Voisin and Wright aëroplanes may seem
very much alike, as we look more closely, we will find many points of
contrast. The Voisin model has a large tail-piece, consisting of two
vertical planes, which project far behind. These planes are believed to
make its flight very steady. A single vertical rudder is placed between
the two rear edges of this plane. The rudders are turned by horizontal,
sliding bars attached to the wheels, directly before the pilot’s seat,
like an automobile. The horizontal rudder in front, which corresponds
to the Wrights’ double lifting plane, is single and is placed lower
down than in the Wright model.

The steadiness of the Voisin aëroplane in flight is gained without
flexing the planes. A series of four vertical planes connect the upper
and lower wings which give the machine much the appearance of a box
kite. These walls are arranged so that the space enclosed at either end
is almost square. It is believed that the arrangement of these walls
keeps the air from sliding off the under surface of the horizontal
planes, and thus greater lifting power is obtained. It is claimed that
the model has much greater longitudinal stability than the Wrights’
machine. In other words, the long tail piece prevents the machine from
tipping or pitching when the wind gusts come unevenly. The box-like or
cellular form, it is believed also, adds to its stability. The model
holds the record for flying at the lowest speed--22.8 miles an hour.
On the other hand, the Voisin model cannot, with any degree of safety,
coast down on the air from great altitudes, like the Wright model.

The method of starting the Voisin airship is entirely different from
the Wrights’. The machine is mounted on two wheels, attached to the
girder body with an arrangement of springs to take up the shock on
landing. To launch the aëroplane, the propellers are started, and the
machine rushes forward on its wheels until it has developed sufficient
speed to send it up. It may thus rise from an ordinarily level ground,
and does not require the apparatus used by the Wrights. The pilot and
passenger sit in much the same position as in the Wright aëroplane.

The Voisin model weighs 300 pounds more than the Wrights’ or 1590
pounds. It has a supporting surface of 535 square feet, and a speed,
under favorable conditions, of 38 miles an hour. Another point of
difference from the Wright model is the propeller, which is single
and measures seven feet six inches in diameter. The motor, an
eight cylinder Antoinette, usually gives fifty horse power at 1100
revolutions per minute. The Wright Brothers, by the way, make their own
motors, which are considered inferior to the French motors.

The smallest and swiftest of all the aëroplanes is the Curtiss-Herring
model, which was invented by two Americans whose names it bears. Its
general form suggests the Wrights’ machine. The span of the large
planes is only 29 feet or under, the depth but four feet six inches,
and the spacing four feet six inches. It has a total wing surface of
but 258 square feet. The weight, not including the pilot, is only about
450 pounds. When seen beside the aëroplane of ordinary size, the little
craft looks like a very large toy model. It has the appearance of a
smart little racer, however, and its maximum speed is over 50 miles an
hour.

Everything has been sacrificed in the Curtiss-Herring model for the
sake of compactness. The forward rudder, which seems small even for
such a craft, consists of two planes, one above the other, whose
combined area is only twenty-four square feet. Unlike the Wright or
Voisin models, this forward rudder carries a vertical plane which makes
for stability. There is no tail as in the Voisin model, and the rear,
vertical rudder consists of a horizontal plane six feet wide and two
feet, three inches deep and a vertical rudder below it, two feet deep
and three feet four inches wide. The front and rear planes extend out
from the main frame about the same distance. The main stability planes,
curiously enough, are placed inside the frame. There are two of these,
one at either end of the main plane.

An ingenious method has been followed to control the various planes.
The pilot sits facing a wheel, like that of an automobile, which is so
rigged that by simply pushing it from him or pulling it back, he may
lift or decline the front planes. By turning this wheel he operates the
rudder in the rear, exactly as you would steer an automobile or a boat.
The balancing mechanism in turn is connected with a frame which fits
about the pilot’s shoulders like a high-backed chair and is operated by
merely leaning to one side or the other. This has the same effect as
warping the main planes. The control of the machine becomes largely
automatic. If the pilot feels that his aëroplane is tilting over at
one end or the other, he merely leans to one side or the other, and,
without taking his hands from the wheel before him, has the machine
under perfect control. Even the motor is controlled by pedals placed
under the pilot’s feet.

This little racer is mounted on three wheels, one well forward and two
in the rear about half way between the main planes and the horizontal
rudder. An original feature of this model is a foot brake which,
connecting with the forward wheel, helps to slow down the machine on
landing, just as you close the brake of an automobile. There is only
one rudder measuring six feet in diameter, which is unusually large
considering the size of the model. The engine is mounted at the center
of the space between the two main planes, and the propeller, which is
kept on a line with it, is therefore considerably higher than in most
aëroplanes. The lower plane comes very near the ground. It is only
raised by about the height of the bicycle wheels. It is thought by
some that this arrangement of the engine blankets the propeller, while
others argue that the suction produced in this way increases the thrust
of the propeller. The machine is built of Oregon spruce, the wings are
covered with oiled rubber silk, and the entire mechanism is beautifully
finished in every detail.

[Illustration: PLATE XXV. Another View of the Wright Model.]

The ingenuity of the designers of aëroplanes is astonishing. With so
many aëroplanes in the field, or rather in the sky, it is surprising
that they are not more alike. The Farman biplane, for instance, follows
the same general proportion as the Wright machine, but there the
similarity ends. To secure equilibrium in this model, four small planes
are used, hinged at the back of the two main planes, and these, it has
been found, take the place of the flexing device used by the Wrights.
The two swinging planes on the lower wing are controlled by wires,
while the upper two swing free. A single lever controls the two lower
planes and the horizontal rudder.

Farman has placed his rear stability planes unusually far behind the
main frame. They consist of two fixed horizontal planes, one above
the other, with a vertical rudder placed in the space between them.
The front horizontal rudder for vertical steering, is a single plane,
mounted close to the entering edge. The vertical rudder is worked by a
foot pedal. The machine is driven by one large wooden propeller, eight
feet six inches in diameter, at a speed of 1300 revolutions per minute,
which, it will be noticed, is unusually high. The Farman biplane is one
of the heaviest yet constructed, weighing about 1000 pounds without the
pilot.

An original plan has also been found for mounting the machine. The
aëroplane rests upon a combination of skids and wheels. There are
two sets of wheels under the front edge of the plane, while the two
skids are placed between the wheels of each pair. The motor is four
cylinder, fifty horse power type, and drives the machine at the rate of
forty miles an hour.

The largest, and by far the heaviest aëroplane is the Cody biplane
built by an American inventor who lives in England. It weighs nearly
one ton, or more than 1800 pounds, to be exact, and measures fifty-two
feet across. The machine is balanced somewhat after the manner of
the Curtiss-Herring model, by two horizontal planes placed at the
extremities of the main planes and midway between the rear corners.
The two main planes are seven feet six inches wide and are placed nine
feet apart, which is considerably farther than in any other successful
model. The upper plane is slightly curved toward the ends. The machine
carries two large horizontal planes for vertical steering, sixteen feet
before the entering edge of the main wings. These planes, placed side
by side, have a combined area of 150 square feet and naturally exert
a considerable lifting force. A small vertical rudder for horizontal
steering is carried above and between these front planes. An unusually
large rudder is placed well behind the machine, consisting of a
vertical plane with an area of forty square feet. All the rudders are
operated by a wheel in front of the pilot’s seat.

In the Cody aëroplane the horizontal rudders are moved by pushing
or pulling the wheel, while by moving it sideways the two balancing
planes, which control the equilibrium, are moved up and down. The most
original feature of the Cody machine is the position of the propellers.
They are carried in the space between the two main planes forward of
the center. It would seem that they must draw the air from the upper
planes and affect their lifting quality. The machine is mounted on
three wheels, two beneath the front edge of the main plane, and the
other slightly forward, which is an unusual distribution. The Cody
biplane, with 770 feet of wing surface, lifts more than 1800 pounds.

[Illustration: PLATE XXVI. An Ingenious Model which Rises Quickly.]

It is all a matter of guess work, of course, whether the monoplane,
biplane, or some entirely new form of aëroplane will come into general
use. Every model has its enthusiastic friends. The biplane, at present,
has greater stability than the monoplane, and carries greater weights
for longer distances. The development of the flying machine is so rapid
however that in five or ten years the successful aëroplane models of
to-day may appear as crude as do the clumsy, lumbering old horseless
carriages of five or ten years ago.



CHAPTER VI

SUCCESSFUL MONOPLANES


While the biplane borrows the general principles of flight from the
birds, the monoplane carries us a step further and almost exactly
reproduces their form and movement. Seen high aloft, with wings
outspread, the monoplanes look like great eagles as, gracefully,
but very noisily, they rise and fall in long, sweeping curves. The
monoplane being a much lighter machine and less complicated is
therefore cheaper to build than any multiplane model. Several of the
successful models ride the air very steadily and have proven themselves
capable of making long and difficult air journeys.

[Illustration: PLATE XXVII. An Aëroplane with Paper Wings.]

Some aviators believe that the monoplane type, highly developed, to
be sure, will some day be adopted for great commercial airships.
Even in its present form, these mechanical birds look very shipshape.
The pilot can find a more comfortable seat among these wings than in
the biplane forms, and it takes little imagination to picture these
airships, greatly enlarged, carrying comfortable cabins filled with air
voyagers. The most successful model aëroplanes, by the way, are of the
monoplane form.

The first monoplane to make an extended flight was the Bleriot. Its
inventor had worked with Voisin in the experiments above the River
Seine at Paris in 1906, and beginning with short flights of only a few
yards worked his way step by step. The machine in which he crossed the
English Channel in 1909, and made several remarkable cross country
flights, was his eleventh model.

Bleriot’s most successful model consists of only two wings curved
upward, mounted on a long motor base which measures twenty-six and one
half feet in length. The body of the monoplane, which is made of ash
and poplar, tapers to a point in the rear and is partially covered
with “Continental fabric,” similar to balloons. The front or main wing
is twenty-five and a half feet in width with a surface of 159 square
feet. The rear plane measures only six feet in width, and three feet in
depth and is equipped with moveable tips or horizontal rudders two feet
square at either side. The vertical rudder for steering to right or
left, is carried behind the frame. The planes are braced by a series of
stay wires running in all directions.

Unlike the biplane, the motor of the monoplane is placed in front of
the wings. The blades of the propeller, which are unusually broad,
measure less than seven feet from tip to tip. The pilot’s seat is
inside the motor frame near the rear edge of the main wing, and with
its high back and sides appears to be a comfortable place to sit. It
has the disadvantage, however, of being directly behind the motor, so
that a draft of air strikes the driver in the face.

The pilot keeps his machine on an even keel by flexing the tips of the
planes, much the same as in the Wright model. The tips of the main
plane and of the two horizontal rudders are connected with a single
lever, which gives the pilot perfect control of them. The horizontal
rudders may be turned to steer the aëroplane up or down in the same
way. The vertical rudder for turning the aëroplane from right to left,
is operated by a foot lever.

The Bleriot monoplane weighs about 500 pounds, so that it carries about
four pounds for every square foot of wing surface, or thirteen pounds
per square foot, which is from two to four times greater than is the
case of any biplane. The machine is mounted on three wheels, two at
the front and one near the rear, just forward of the rudders. It has a
speed of nearly forty miles an hour.

All the present monoplane models follow the same general plan of
placing their propellers and larger planes in front and their
horizontal rudder for vertical steering in the rear. The idea is
gaining ground, however, that it would be better if this arrangement
was reversed, and they flew with what is now the tail in front. The
theory of this arrangement is that if the edge of the lifting planes
is presented to the air, they would answer the helm much better, as
has been proven in the biplane forms. The experiment of reversing the
monoplane forms has been tried in model aëroplanes with great success.

The heaviest and largest of the monoplanes at present is the Antoinette
model, which is the invention of M. Levasseur. It looks like a great
dragon fly, and has proven itself very steady in flight. The main
wings, measuring forty-two feet in width seem to be arched unusually
high from front to rear, and taper rather sharply at the ends. Their
total lifting surface is a trifle over 300 feet. In some of the
Antoinette models the wings are set in the form of a broad, dihedral
angle. The monoplane is driven from a seat in the body of the frame
as the Bleriot model, but moved slightly farther back. The rear
horizontal rudder is controlled by a large wheel at the left of the
pilot’s seat, while a corresponding wheel on the right controls the
small hinged wings at the outer edge of the main plane. The pilot
turns his airship from right to left by merely pressing two foot
pedals connected with the vertical rudder in the rear. In the later
models, the dihedral angle has been abandoned and the front planes set
horizontally.

[Illustration: A Very Simple Monoplane for Beginners.]

The most novel feature of the Antoinette model is the form and control
of the rear rudders and stability planes. The model carries two
vertical rudders for turning the craft to the right or left, and a
large horizontal rudder for vertical steering, extending far out behind
at the end of the main body. All of these rudders are triangular in
shape, tapering to a point in the rear. The Antoinette has proved, it
is believed, that the corners of square rudders may be removed, without
affecting their guiding qualities, thus saving considerable surface
and weight. It would seem, on general principles, that just the reverse
would be the case. The builder of model aëroplanes may take a leaf from
the log of this airship.

The Antoinette stability planes are placed just forward of the rudders,
and are triangular in shape, but with somewhat narrow ends pointing
toward the front. Two of these planes are carried horizontally and one
vertically, the vertical planes being above the horizontals. The chief
fault of this model is that the rear horizontal stability plane, being
perfectly flat, exerts little lifting power. The method of warping the
tips of the planes, the same as in the Wright aëroplane, works well
with this model, and the flights, are as a rule, remarkable steady. The
machine lands on wooden skids, carried well forward, connected with the
frame by flexible joints. It is supported in the rear by two wheels
under the center of the planes.

The Santos Dumont monoplane is, so far, the smallest and lightest
monoplane to make a successful flight. It is the aëronautical
runabout, and, although it has made no very extended air journeys,
it has introduced several interesting features. Its owner has flown
several miles across country in his little craft, housed it in an
ordinary stable while making a call, and then, starting from the front
lawn, flown home again without assistance of any kind. His machine may
be counted upon to fly at the rate of about thirty-seven miles an hour.
It weighs only 245 pounds without the pilot.

The main plane is set at an angle so that, seen from the front, the
wings rise from the center, but later bend down toward the tips. The
front or entering edge is also elevated to an unusually high degree,
giving it the appearance of a rather flat umbrella. The pilot sits
underneath this front plane just below the center. The stability of
this plane is maintained by fixing the ends in the usual manner. The
wires connecting with the ends of the planes, are carried to a lever
which is attached to the pilot’s back. The pilot, therefore, without
using his hands, but merely by swaying his body from side to side, can
warp the planes and bring his craft to an even keel.

The Santos Dumont monoplane carries no regular stability plane at the
rear, but depends for its support and guidance upon a small vertical
and horizontal rudder at the end of its very short frame. These two
rudders bisect one another, or in other words, half of the vertical
rudder is above and half below the horizontal rudder, while half of the
horizontal rudder is on one side and half on the other of the vertical
rudder. They are attached to a single rigid framework, so that both
move as a whole by means of a universal joint. The rudders, used for
ascending and descending, are operated by a lever, while the rudders
used for horizontal steering are controlled by a wheel.

[Illustration: Otto Lilienthal about to Take Flight.]

The aëroplane is mounted on two wheels, placed at the front of
the frame and a vertical strut at the rear, thus reversing the
arrangement of the Antoinette. This adjustment works well in practice,
and the Santos Dumont holds the record for rising from the ground in
the shortest distance. It has risen in six and a quarter seconds after
traveling only 230 feet. The area of its wings is only 110 square feet
and its propeller consisting of double wooden blades measures only six
feet three inches in diameter. It carries a 30 H. P. motor.

The R. E. P. monoplane, the name being formed by the initials of its
inventor, Robert Esnault-Pelterie, is an experiment along new lines.
Its inventor believes that the wires and struts of the monoplane in
vibrating, offer considerable resistance to the air and seriously
retard its forward movement. His monoplane has, therefore, been
constructed practically without stays, wires, or rods. The monoplane
is graceful in form, light and compact, although somewhat expensive to
build.

The main frame of the airship is made of steel girders with a broad
surface and tapering to a sharp edge at the bottom. It is covered
completely with cloth, thus forming a vertical stability plane of
considerable area. The motor and propeller are carried at the front of
the frame, while the pilot’s seat is fixed inside the frame, just back
of the machinery.

The main planes have a span of thirty-five feet six inches. They extend
from either side of the frame, and taper slightly toward their outer
edges. Two large rudders are carried at the rear of the frame. The
vertical rudder for horizontal steering is attached to an extension of
the main frame and the horizontal rudder projects from the end at a
higher level. A fixed vertical stability plane or fin extends along the
main frame back of the pilot’s seat. The warping of the plane and the
control of both rudders is accomplished by levers placed convenient to
the pilot’s hand.

The R. E. P. model, alone among the aëroplanes, is equipped with a four
blade propeller. It measures six feet six inches in diameter, and is
driven at the speed of 1400 revolutions per minute. The speed of the
craft is remarkable since it has flown for short distances at the rate
of forty-seven miles an hour. Its weight, 780 pounds, is not unusual.

An entirely new idea has been introduced in mounting this model. It
rests upon only two wheels, one at the front, the other at the end of
the central frame. Wheels are also attached to the outer edges of the
main plane. When at rest, the model tilts over to one side or the other
and rests on one of these wheels. Once the motor has been started, the
machine quickly rights itself, as the speed increases, and runs along
on two wheels.



CHAPTER VII

AERIAL WARFARE


The boys who turn these pages may some day read of aërial battles
fought high above the earth, and some may even take part in them.
Air-ships are even now included in the navies of nineteen nations.
There is great difference of opinion among experts whether the balloon
or aëroplane will prove the better fighting machine, but, meanwhile,
aëronautical corps and regiments are being recruited, formidable navies
of air-ships are being laid down, and special guns are being built to
battle against them.

[Illustration: A Machine for Testing the Lifting Power of Aëroplanes.
In this machine power is transmitted from the horizontal main shaft and
upward through the vertical steel spindle and through the two members
of the long arm. A is a scale showing miles per hour and B a scale
divided into feet per minute; C, Dynamometer for recording the push of
screw; D, Dynamometer showing the lift of the aeroplane.]

The ordinary balloon has played a much more important part in actual
warfare than most people realize. A balloon corps was organized in
France as early as 1794, when balloons were built for each of the
Republican armies. One of these balloons, measuring thirty feet in
diameter, was sent up near Mayence, to gain a view of the Austrian
army. The balloon was held captive by two ropes, and an officer in the
car wrote his observations, weighted the letters, and dropped them
overboard. The Austrians were furious at this spying, and opened fire,
but the ropes were lengthened and the balloon rose to a height of 1300
feet, where it was out of range. Several years later balloons were
again used in battles by the French against the Austrians, who were
so angry with the new machine that they declared that any balloonist
captured would be shot. For a long time afterward, however, this method
of warfare was neglected, and even Napoleon could not see its value,
and closed the aëronautical school and disbanded the corps.

The use of the balloon was revived in America during the Civil War,
and proved to be so valuable that no great war has since been fought
without it. During the attack on Richmond, a number of balloons were
sent up daily by the Federal Army to overlook the besieged city. From
a point eight miles away, valuable information was gained as to the
position of the troops and the earthworks. A telegraph apparatus was
taken up and messages were sent directly from the clouds, almost over
Richmond to Washington.

In the Spanish-American War in 1898, the balloon was again called into
use. One ascent was made before Santiago, Cuba, and the position of the
various Spanish forces were observed and reported. Another was sent
up at El Paso, less than 2000 feet from the Spanish trenches, and the
position of the Spanish troops on San Juan Hill was discovered. The
balloon was finally brought down by the Spanish guns.

During the siege of Paris in 1870, balloons were used successfully to
escape from the city. Some sixty-six of them, carrying 168 passengers,
succeeded in passing over the German armies. The French army has also
made good use of the balloon in the wars in Madagascar, and several
English balloon corps were engaged with the British army during the
Boer War.

For ordinary military work, balloons of three sizes are used, a large
balloon for forts, the regular war balloon, and an auxiliary for field
work. The large balloon holds 34,500 cubic feet of gas and is only used
above fortifications. The regular field balloon is thirty-three feet
in diameter, and holds 19,000 cubic feet of gas. It is designed to
carry two passengers to a height of 1650 feet. The auxiliary balloon is
considerably smaller, holding only 9200 cubic feet of gas, and carrying
but one passenger. It is much easier to handle on long marches, and, of
course, may be filled and sent aloft in much less time.

The balloons are usually filled from cylinders, which may be hurried
across country in carts or automobiles. There is, besides, a regular
field gas generator, readily packed up and carried about, which will
fill an ordinary balloon in from fifteen to twenty minutes. To resist
aërial attacks, a special armored automobile has been adopted by some
European armies, carrying a gun which may be aimed upward and at any
angle. Despite its weight, the automobile will travel at the rate of
forty miles an hour. The recent developments of the dirigible war
balloon has rendered the free balloon practically obsolete, and it is
unlikely that it will ever again be used in actual warfare.

The United States has been the first country to adopt the aëroplane
as a weapon of warfare. After the successful flights of the Wright
Brothers, the War Department purchased one of their aëroplanes, and
several officers were instructed in driving it. Before being accepted,
the Wrights were required to make a flight of ten miles over a rough,
mountainous country near Washington, and return without alighting. The
test, which was highly successful, was witnessed by President Taft
and many representatives of the Government. In the event of war, the
United States Government could quickly mobilize a formidable fleet of
aëroplanes, and man them with experienced aviators.

[Illustration: The Machine on the Rails, as it appeared in 1893.]

[Illustration: Maxim’s First Aëroplane.]

The value of aëroplanes in warfare has been widely discussed by
military experts. There was, at first, a general impression that
such flights were much too uncertain to be of practical value. The
marvellous development of the aëroplane, and its remarkable flights
over land and sea, have served to silence much of this criticism.

Although an over-sea invasion by a fleet of air-ships would seem to
be a danger of the very distant future, the United States Government
is already preparing to meet the situation. A remarkable series of
tests have been made at the Government Proving Grounds at Sandy Hook,
by firing at free balloons as they sailed past the fort. The balloons
were sent away at various altitudes, in some cases at a considerable
distance from the guns, and again directly above them. The difficulty
in hitting such targets was found to be very great. The air craft moves
so quickly that it is almost impossible to bring a gun of the ordinary
mounting into position. Although the results of the test were closely
guarded, it is known that the Government was not satisfied with the
defense of New York Harbor, in the event of an aërial invasion, and
special guns are being designed to repel such an attack.

The military authorities look very far into the future in their
preparations. One of the most interesting of these problems is that
of protecting our seacoast, should a fleet of aërial warships be sent
against us. One of the plans suggested is to raise a series of captive
balloons at regular intervals along the shore. It has been thought that
some of these might be held near the earth, while others are allowed
to ascend to a great altitude. The lookout in these signal stations
could sight the approach of an hostile fleet of air-ships at a great
distance, and by means of wireless apparatus warn the country of
approaching danger.

Many military experts, who have watched the flights of aëroplanes, have
decided that the little craft would also prove an extremely difficult
object for the enemy to bring down. Since they travel at upwards of a
mile a minute, ordinary guns, as they are now mounted, could not hope
to hit them except by a lucky shot. It would be like hunting wild geese
with a cannon. At a height of several thousand feet, which they can
readily attain, an aëroplane might defy the most formidable batteries
in the world. Should a fleet of these little craft be sent against an
enemy, many of them would be sure to survive an attack, even if a few
should be lost. It does not seem probable that the aëroplane will carry
aloft a cannon large enough to do any damage. But they can drop high
explosives, with astonishing accuracy, and would do important scout
work.

At the present cost of construction, a fleet of one hundred aëroplanes
might be built and put in commission in the field or sky, for what a
single great battleship would cost. It has been shown, moreover, that
a man can learn to operate an aëroplane in less time than it takes to
learn to ride a bicycle. The Wrights instructed Lieutenant Lahm to
drive one of their machines in about two hours of actual flight. The
war aëroplanes would call for great bravery and daring, but who can
doubt that men would be found to serve their country, if need be, by
facing this appalling danger.

In military language, the modern airships fall into three classes,
dreadnaughts, cruisers and scouts. The dreadnaughts of the air are the
largest dirigible balloons, such as Zeppelin flies. They will probably
be used in aërial warfare in the first line of battle, and for over-sea
work. The cruisers comprise the dirigibles, such as have been brought
to great perfection in France. These faster air-ships will rise higher
than the dreadnaughts, and will probably be used for guarding and scout
work. The aëroplanes come under the head of scouts, and will be used
for dispatch work, and for attacking dirigibles.

[Illustration: First Flight of the Wright Brothers’ First Motor
Machine. This picture shows the machine just after lifting from the
track, flying against a wind of twenty-four miles an hour.]

Their speed and effective radius of travel place the air-ship in
the first rank among the engines of war. The value of the free or
captive balloon has, of course, been clearly proven. It has been of
the greatest value for general observation work in the field. It has
been readily raised out of effective range of the enemy’s batteries,
and from this position, has looked down upon the forts, cities, or
encampments. It thus became a signal station which might direct gun
fire with absolute accuracy, and has been the only safe and reliable
method for locating the presence of mines and submarines.

The dirigible balloon possesses all of the qualities of the free
balloon and many more. It can attack by day or night. Its search lights
enable it to look down upon the enemy with pitiless accuracy. It may
thus gain information about forts and harbors, which otherwise could
not be approached. The most completely mined harbor in the world
has no terrors for such a visitor. The great problem in warfare of
patrolling the frontier of a country against possible invasion seems to
be solved by the dirigible. Two or three men aboard a dirigible, with a
traveling radius of several hundred miles, could do more effective work
than several thousand men scattered along the frontier line.

For dispatch work the flying machine is expected to be indispensable
in warfare. The bearer of dispatches has always played an important
part in war. His work is often of the most perilous nature, and his
journeys, at best, are slow and uncertain. The dispatch bearer, driving
an air-ship fifty miles an hour, could ride high above the range of
the enemy’s guns. These same vehicles of the air would doubtless be
equipped with wireless telegraph apparatus, so that they might send or
receive messages, and the aviator might talk freely with the entire
country side, directing a battery here, silencing one there, ordering
an advance or conducting a retreat, with unprecedented accuracy.

These aërial fleets may also carry on deadly aggressive warfare. The
over sea raid will have greater terror than any ordinary invasion. A
fleet of dreadnaughts dirigibles, assisted by fast cruisers of the air,
and many aëroplane scouts, would be extremely formidable. An enemy’s
base line would be at the mercy of such an invasion. Within a few
hours, such a fleet might destroy the enemy’s stores, its railroads,
and its cities, by dropping explosives or poisonous bombs.

In several recent aëroplane flights, “peace bombs” have been aimed to
strike a given mark, and the shots have proven surprisingly accurate.
By using various instruments to determine directions, it will be
possible to drop such bombs with mathematical accuracy. The bombs or
missiles will be suspended by wires from beneath the air-ship and
released by an electric current, to give them a perfectly vertical
direction. When dropped from great altitudes, the effect of such
explosions will be difficult to withstand. Our great war-ships, despite
their steel sides, will probably have to be completely remodelled
before they can fight with this new enemy.

When an air-ship drops a bomb from a point directly above a fort or
ship, it will be absolutely out of the range of the enemy, since to
shoot directly up into the air would be to fire a boomerang which
would quickly return and inflict serious damage. An actual test was
recently carried out in England, when a thirteen pound gun fired at a
balloon 1000 feet in the air. Although the gun had an effective range
of 4000 feet, and the balloon was held captive, it was not until the
seventeenth shot had been fired that it was brought down. It has also
been proven that a rifle ball will be deflected by the draught from the
propeller of an aëroplane. The flying machine promises to revolutionize
warfare.

[Illustration: Three-quarters View of a Flight at Simms Station,
November 16, 1904.]



CHAPTER VIII

SPORTS OF THE AIR, AEROPLANES


Any contest of air-ships makes excellent sport. A city to city flight
by aëroplane, for instance, attracts greater crowds than could any
procession or royal progress in the past. The aëronautical tournaments
and meets already have been held from Egypt in the East, to California
in the west. Let an aëroplane soar higher than any has risen before,
stay aloft longer, or make a new record for speed or distance, and the
news is instantly cabled around the world.

All who have gone aloft tell us that flying is the greatest sport in
the world. The free, rapid glide we all enjoy in skating or coasting
becomes speedier and smoother in an air-ship, without exerting the
least effort. It is this sense of rapid motion which has made the
automobile so popular, and the air-ship improves upon the automobile,
just as the automobile improved on the lumbering coaches of the past.
Once aloft, the aërial passenger glides with the swallow’s swiftness.
“Now,” cried an enthusiastic Frenchwoman, after her first aëroplane
flight, “now I understand why the birds sing.”

As the aëroplane is brought under better control, we will see these
contests grow more and more exciting. The development of the new craft
has been so rapid, we have come to expect so much from it, that the
exhibition at which the world marvels to-day, becomes the commonplace
of to-morrow.

The early flights of the Wright Brothers at Kitty Hawk failed to
attract much attention. There had been so many announcements of
successful flying machines that many were sceptical, especially in
Europe, and the world did not realize that the great day, so long
promised, was dawning. It was not till the Wrights flew in North
Carolina that the world began to take the matter seriously.

Every movement of the curious new craft was closely watched thereafter.
When one of the brothers went aloft the world knew it, and crowds
stood patiently before bulletin boards in New York, London, or Sidney,
to count the minutes. When he succeeded in staying aloft for an
hour, the waiting crowds in many widely separated cities, broke into
simultaneous cheers. Next came the trip to Pau, in France, and other
European cities, and day by day the flights became longer and higher.
The brothers made double progress, for while one was in Southern Europe
increasing the time aloft, the other was flying higher and higher in
Germany. In these early days no attempt was made to fly across the
country. The aëroplane merely flew around and around some large field,
and the distance traversed was calculated more or less accurately.

After the triumphant return of the Wrights to America, a cross-country
run was made at Fort Myer, to show the Government that the aëroplane
was more than a toy. A flight of twenty miles was made over a rough,
mountainous country and several deep valleys. The air of the valleys
drew the machine down with a dangerous rush, but the aviator pluckily
worked his way higher, and passed over it in safety.

Shortly after this, during the Hudson-Fulton Celebration in New York,
Mr. Wilbur Wright rose from Governor’s Island in New York harbor,
encircled the Statue of Liberty, and again sailed high above the river
north to Grant’s Tomb, and returned to the starting point. Each of
these feats was, in a peculiar sense, record breaking.

[Illustration: Front View of the Flight of the Wright Aëroplane,
October 4, 1905.]

Meanwhile, a flock of aviators were making ascensions in biplanes and
monoplanes of many designs in France. Their first attempts to fly
were made, as a rule, in a great field on the outskirts of Paris,
where immense crowds gathered to watch them. As the aviators gained
confidence in their craft, the flights rapidly became longer and
higher, and short cross-country flights were made. These cross-country
and over-water flights quickly out-distanced those made in America,
and this lead once gained, was kept up. There are several reasons why
France, after America pointed the way, should have overtaken, and, in
some respects, out-distanced her. There have been more aviators in
France. The prizes offered for flights of various kinds, have been ten
times more numerous and valuable in France than in any other country,
and this naturally invited competition. The example of France in
offering valuable prizes for long flights has since been followed in
the United States.

It should be borne in mind, again, that the level stretches of country
common in Europe, offers fewer difficulties for the pilot of the
aëroplane than the rough, mountainous, or even hilly country often
encountered in America. It is possible to fly hundreds of miles in the
south of France or in Italy and pass over country like a great parade
ground. When a long-distance flight is made in America, rivalling or
surpassing those made abroad, it is probable that it has required far
more skill and daring than similar European flights. The French, again,
excel in building light, serviceable motors, suitable for aëroplanes,
and no small part of the success of the French air craft is due to this
skill.

The cross-country trips were quickly extended. After several successful
short flights, Henry Farman surpassed all records by traveling for
eighty-three miles across country in France. The great feat was now to
cross the English Channel. A prize of $5,000 was offered by a London
newspaper for the first channel flight. Two attempts were made by a
young Frenchman, Hubert Latham, but both times, after sailing out for
several miles over the sea, some accident befell his machine, and
he was thrown into the water. Undaunted by these failures, another
Frenchman, Louis Bleriot, started early one Sunday morning, June 25,
1909, from a point near Calais, France, and landed safely at Dover
on the English side. Shortly after this, still another Frenchman, De
Lesseps, flew from the French coast to England in safety.

The richest of the aviation prizes, a purse of $50,000, had meanwhile
been offered for a successful trip by a heavier-than-air machine from
London to Manchester, a distance of 171 miles. Several attempts had
been made to cover this distance, but without success. It was finally
won, however, under very dramatic circumstances. Two aviators, an
Englishman named White and a Frenchman named Paulhan, actually raced
for the goal. The French machine got away first, but was followed by
the English machine close on his heels--or should we say propellers?
The greater part of the race took place at night in a high wind, and,
in the upper air lanes, intensely cold weather.

Paulhan succeeded in flying 117 miles without coming down, rushing
along through the night at top speed, with the dread that every sound
behind him came from the machine of his rival. When he was forced
to land for fuel, he worked with feverish haste, fearing that every
second’s delay might cost him the coveted prize. Several times the
crowd about him, deceived by some night bird, cried “Here comes White!”
As a matter of fact, White was but a few miles behind. The fuel tank
filled, Paulhan drove his machine full speed into the sky, and did not
land till he had completed the journey and won the prize.

There was naturally a great demand for a similar journey in America,
and the aviator and the prize were soon found. For several years there
had been a standing prize of $10,000 for the first successful flight
between New York and Albany, over the Hudson River, the course taken by
Robert Fulton in his famous trip by steamboat in 1809. An effort was
made to cover the distance by dirigible balloon without success. An
attempt was made by aëroplane on May, 1910, by Glenn H. Curtiss, the
winner of the grand prize for speed in the aviation meeting at Rheims.
Curtis started from Albany, in order to face the air currents which
drew up the river. After waiting for several days for fair weather,
he finally got away early one morning, and, following the course of
the Hudson River, made the flight to Poughkeepsie, seventy-five miles
south, without mishap, when he landed for fuel.

Again rising into the air, he started south, traveling with such speed,
that he outdistanced the special train which was following him. A
difficult problem in aviation was met in passing over the Highlands,
a rugged mountainous section, through which the river cuts a deep,
tortuous channel. Curtiss rose to a height of more than 1000 feet, but
the treacherous air currents drew him down and tossed him about at
perilous angles. He fought his way, foot by foot, finally bringing his
craft to an even keel. On reaching New York, he landed in the upper
section of the city for gasolene, and once more rising above the Hudson
River, flew swiftly to the riotous clamor of every whistle in the
great harbor beneath him, to a safe landing at Governor’s Island.

The first great city to city and return aëroplane trip was made a few
days later, between New York and Philadelphia. A new aspirant for these
honors was Mr. Charles K. Hamilton, who had amazed everyone with his
daring driving. He was engaged to fly over the course for $10,000,
offered by a New York and a Philadelphia newspaper. He carried with him
letters from the Governor of New York and the Mayor of New York City
to the Governor of Pennsylvania and the Mayor of Philadelphia. He also
took aloft a number of “peace bombs,” which he dropped along the route
to show how accurate might be the aim of a war aëroplane. The start was
made early on the morning of June 13, from Governor’s Island in New
York harbor. A special train was held in readiness to follow him.

After rising to a considerable altitude, Hamilton flew in great circles
about the island to try his wings, and then, signaling that all was
ready, darted off to the south. He quickly picked up his special train,
and, at a pace of almost a mile a minute, flying hundreds of feet in
air, sped on to Philadelphia. It was estimated that more than 1,000,000
people had gathered along the route to cheer him. Hamilton had laid out
a regular time-table before starting, and so perfect was his control of
the machine, that he passed town after town on time to the minute like
a railroad train.

The run to Philadelphia eighty miles away, was made without alighting
and without mishap of any kind. Hamilton flew over the open field
selected for landing, circled it three times to show that he was not
tired in the least, and settled down as lightly as a bird. He was
received by the Governor of Pennsylvania and the Deputy Mayor of
Philadelphia, to whom he delivered his messages and received similar
letters in reply to bring back to New York.

After a brief rest of little more than one hour, Hamilton was once
more in the sky, flying across-country at express speed. He set such
a pace, that his special train was left far behind, and it was only
by running at the rate of seventy-five miles an hour, that it finally
overtook him. Hamilton drew far ahead of the train on the return trip
which was made in much faster time. The wind was favorable, and Newark,
eighty miles, was reached at the rate of fifty miles an hour.

With the goal practically in sight, Hamilton’s engine began working
badly. He pushed on, until he found himself in absolute danger, when
he decided to descend. From such high altitudes, the appearance of the
ground is very deceptive. Hamilton chose what appeared to be a smooth
piece of green grass and dropped to it, only to discover that he had
settled in a marsh. The fault in the engine was quickly remedied, but
now the ground proved too soft for him to rise. In trying to rise he
broke his propeller, and another delay followed, while a new propeller
was hurried from New York. He finally succeeded, however, in rising
and completing his trip to Governor’s Island, thus making the round
trip in a day and winning the prize.

So rapid is the advance in the new science, that each aviation meet
sets a new and more difficult standard. At first, people marvelled to
see an aëroplane rising but a few feet from the ground, but such feats
soon became commonplace. Within a few months, prizes were offered for
the machine staying aloft for the longest time. The element of speed
was next considered, and the aëroplanes sailed around a race course
against time. The highest altitude now became a popular test feat.
The pilots soon found themselves in such complete control of their
machines that they gave exhibitions of landing by the force of gravity
alone. The aëroplane would work its way upward in great spirals, and
then, shutting off all power, coast down at terrifying angles on the
unsubstantial air. It is from such tests as these that there will
gradually evolve the airships of the future, the terrible engines of
war, the air liners for commerce, and the light and speedy pleasure
craft.



Transcriber’s Notes:

Variations in spelling and hyphenation are retained.

Perceived typographical errors have been changed.





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