Replica Flyer Foiled By Weather
An anonymous reader submits: "A replica of the Wright Brothers' 1903 flyer failed to fly yesterday afternoon at a demonstration in Chicago. Organizers blamed the measly 5 MPH winds. Kitty Hawk had 25 MPH back on December 17, 1903. IIRC, isn't Chicago the 'Windy City?'" Here's an earlier story about the various groups attempting to re-enact the Wright brothers' pioneer flight.
Actually... Chicago is called the windy city because of the politians, not the wind. It's a "hot air" sort of wind :)
But it is usually 'blustery' as well...
-Digital Extremist
Why would someone try this? The technology is ancient and there are much better...
Oh wait, wasn't there a story on here a few days ago about how to hook a C64 to your cable modem?
Never mind then.
What post? The one you're carrying inside your rusty innards!
A recreation of Columbus' first voyage was scheduled to begin today in Spain, but was called off due to the presence of what the organizers of the event described as "a wave in the ocean."
Interestingly, several modern aircraft don't even rely on the airfoil principles pioneered by the Wright Brothers.
The F-4 Phantom's wings don't even have an airfoil shape. To compensate, they have huge engines mounted with a different angle of attack than the wings, so the wings act as lifting bodies because they're tilted up, as opposed to any help from Bernoulli.
Like several other modern fighters, F-4 proves that you can put enough power behind a brick and it will fly.
So the Wright Brothers needed 25mph headwinds. Is that any less an airplane than an F-4?
Kevin Fox