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Launching a sea-plane from a wire

Launching a sea-plane from a wire.jpg Tumbling.—XIII. CenturyThumbnailsSaint DominicTumbling.—XIII. CenturyThumbnailsSaint DominicTumbling.—XIII. CenturyThumbnailsSaint DominicTumbling.—XIII. CenturyThumbnailsSaint DominicTumbling.—XIII. CenturyThumbnailsSaint DominicTumbling.—XIII. CenturyThumbnailsSaint Dominic
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By another method, shown in figure, the sea-plane is launched from a cable suspended between two masts, and can come to rest upon the cable again after a flight has been made. The machine is hung upon the cable prior to making an ascent; then the pilot starts his engine, and as his machine glides forward along the cable he releases a catch and soars into the air. Upon returning he flies beneath the cable, and makes his craft rise until the “V”-shaped apparatus above his head is caught by the cable and the catch becomes operative; then he stops his motor, and his craft hangs from the cable as it did before.

A. Sea-plane
B. Cable
C. The “V”-shaped apparatus which guides the cable into the clip (D.) and so suspends the machine from the wire.

Author
The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Aeroplane, by Claude Grahame-White and Harry Harper
Published 1914
Dimensions
1200*590
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