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Re-Building the Wright Flyer

Isaac-Lew writes: "Several teams are trying to build a working replica of the first Wright Brothers' airplane." As the article says, "The catch is: Each team wants its plane to fly more or less as the Wrights' did." The only problem with that is that as Orville Wright put it, their plane was "exceedingly erratic," so the recreators have made some slight concessions to safety.

5 of 175 comments (clear)

  1. Why are there "secrets"? by phr2 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The part about discouraging workshop photographs in order to not leak info to the competition is weird. What modern high tech processes are there to protect, if you're trying to do something the same way it was done 100 years ago? I'd have thought most of the interest in a project like this was in being as open and historically accurate as possible.

  2. Re:Answering the obvious question - why? by why-is-it · · Score: 3, Insightful

    They're trying to build a version to fly at Kitty Hawk for the centennial celebration of the original flight, December 17th 1903.

    Not to belabour the point - but why?

    Sure, it was an important achievement, but what's the point? And why have more than one team? Bragging rights are all that seems to be on the line here. So, in the race to build the first, best replica, a number of teams are devoting a lot of time and resources to a project that will add nothing to the body of human knowledge and experience - regardless of the outcome.

    So I will ask the obvious question again. Why? There is nothing wrong with marking the occasion, but this is way OTT.

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  3. Re:Wright Brothers did not fly first by radja · · Score: 3, Insightful

    wasn't it the first POWERED flight?

    //rdj

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  4. Dangerous, but what the heck? by Rogerborg · · Score: 3, Insightful

    As an aside, bear in mind that Scrapheap Challenge (the original UK name and format for Junkyard Wars) has already seen teams build and fly:

    Yes, that's right. If you haven't seen it, some poor mad fool got in a canard nosed "glider" that had been bodged up in day, and reached about 20mph and 15 feet before releasing the tow line. The "glider" went in a direction that could charitably be described as "not quite a plummet". He walked away. Then did it again, only faster. And again, reaching about 30mph. This is pretty much comparable with the speeds and energies in the Wright brother's creation.

    The remote plane was an interesting one. It actually flew, in a very nearly controlled fashion. OK, it was built with modern scrap, but it was scrap, and it was built in a day.

    I'm kind of wondering why the people building the replica airplanes feel the need to have human pilots in them. Remote control or even an expert system might do nicely if safety is a concern.

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  5. Re:Wright Brothers? Give Me A Break by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The reason the Wright brothers are given the credit for the first real heavier than air aircraft is because their design principles turned out to be scalable - they were able to take the Flyer and turn it into an airplane capable of sustained, controllable flight. None of the other designs were capable of being turned into something that was really usable for more than a flight of a few seconds.