Here is Sir George’s flying carriage in all its kite-looking beauty.
I followed neither the “flying” replicas nor the modern
renditions but the original Cayley’s drawings. In his description he states that
wire or rope may be used for the rigging, so I used “rope”, more accordingly to
contemporary ballooning and nautical practices. In his drawings the fore mast
does not protrude above the sail, and so it was depicted here too.
The step-by-step post explaining the building of the model
is here:
The sight of this model is refreshing and helps us
understand and appreciate the hard labor, keen minds and ingenuity of the aviation
pioneers.
This looks perfectly flyable, much more flyable than this: http://1000aircraftphotos.com/Contributions/KleinBernhard/7104.jpg
ReplyDeleteIt flies indeed. When I was taking the outdoors shot a gust of wind blew it from the base, and it "flew" to the grass. Phew!
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