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Mouillard’s aëroplane

Mouillard’s aëroplane.jpg Le Bris’ aëroplane, 1855ThumbnailsBlériot’s Toury-Artenay aëroplane circuit, 1908Le Bris’ aëroplane, 1855ThumbnailsBlériot’s Toury-Artenay aëroplane circuit, 1908Le Bris’ aëroplane, 1855ThumbnailsBlériot’s Toury-Artenay aëroplane circuit, 1908Le Bris’ aëroplane, 1855ThumbnailsBlériot’s Toury-Artenay aëroplane circuit, 1908
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But Mouillard did more than theorize; he built soaring machines and soared a little. His third and best glider, illustrated, was a tailless monoplane made of curved agave sticks screwed to boards, and covered with muslin. The aviator, standing in the open space C, harnessed the plane on with straps looped round his legs and shoulders, and fastened to the points D D. His forearms, passing under straps, rested on the board, enabling him to tilt the whole by shifting his weight

Author
Aërial Navigation
A Popular Treatise on the Growth of Air Craft and on Aëronautical Meteorology
By Albert Francis Zahm
Published in 1911
Available from gutenberg.org
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