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Launching the Wright Glider

Launching the Wright Glider.jpg Man lifting a 100 horse-power aeroplane motorThumbnailsThe Wright Wing-warpMan lifting a 100 horse-power aeroplane motorThumbnailsThe Wright Wing-warpMan lifting a 100 horse-power aeroplane motorThumbnailsThe Wright Wing-warpMan lifting a 100 horse-power aeroplane motorThumbnailsThe Wright Wing-warpMan lifting a 100 horse-power aeroplane motorThumbnailsThe Wright Wing-warp
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Two assistants took the machine by its plane-ends and ran forward with it, the pilot assuming beforehand his position upon the plane; then, when they had gained a pace sufficient for the machine to soar, they released their hold and it glided forward. Beneath the glider, under the centre of the lower plane, there were two wooden skates or runners, and these took the weight of the machine when it alighted, and allowed it to slide forward across the ground before coming to rest. By the use of these landing skids, and by steering at as fine an angle as possible, the Wrights found they could touch ground, even at 20 miles an hour and lying across the machine, without injury either to themselves or the craft.

Author
The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Aeroplane, by Claude Grahame-White and Harry Harper
Published 1914
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894*498
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