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The Wright Wing-warp

The Wright Wing-warp.jpg Launching the Wright GliderThumbnailsThe 1900 Wright Glider (operator’s position)Launching the Wright GliderThumbnailsThe 1900 Wright Glider (operator’s position)Launching the Wright GliderThumbnailsThe 1900 Wright Glider (operator’s position)Launching the Wright GliderThumbnailsThe 1900 Wright Glider (operator’s position)Launching the Wright GliderThumbnailsThe 1900 Wright Glider (operator’s position)
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Apart from governing the ascending or descending movement, there was the question of preventing a machine from slipping sideways; and this the Wrights solved ingeniously. They saw, of course, that when their glider lurched to one side or the other, they would need some power to tilt it back again. So they devised a system by which the plane-ends of their machine—being made flexible—might be warped, or caused to shift up and down. This action the operator controlled, as he lay across the lower plane, by a movement of cords, and its operation is shown in Figure. The effect upon the machine may be described thus: should a wind-gust tilt down one plane-end, the “warp” upon that side of the machine was drawn down also, and the effect of this—seeing that it caused the plane to assume a steeper angle to the air and exercise a greater lift—was to raise the plane-ends that had been driven down by the gust. By a system of connecting the control cords, this balancing influence was made to act with double force; when one wing warped down, the other moved up; and, in this way, while the side of the machine tilted down was made to rise, the other plane-ends, which had been lifted, were made to descend. A dual righting influence was thus obtained. This system, which imitates the flexing movements made by a bird, was an important device; the Wrights patented it—combining the movement with an action of the rudder—and brought cases at law to enforce their rights.



Author
The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Aeroplane, by Claude Grahame-White and Harry Harper
Published 1914
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900*215
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