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Forlanini’s helicopter, 1878

Forlanini’s helicopter, 1878.jpg Caring for a wounded birdMiniaturesSand BabiesCaring for a wounded birdMiniaturesSand BabiesCaring for a wounded birdMiniaturesSand BabiesCaring for a wounded birdMiniaturesSand BabiesCaring for a wounded birdMiniaturesSand Babies
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A still more ambitious helicopter was that shown invented by Professor Forlanini, an Italian Civil Engineer, and launched in 1878. The lower screw was fastened to the frame of a steam engine, the upper screw was attached to the crank shaft. Steam was supplied from the globe shown beneath, which was two thirds filled with water, and well heated over a separate fire just before an ascension. As the globe was merely a reservoir of hot water and steam, carrying neither fuel nor furnace, its power waned rapidly. The best flight lasted about twenty seconds, attaining a height of 42 feet. The apparatus weighed 77 pounds, spread 21.5 square feet of screw surface, and lifted about 26.4 pounds per horse power.

Auteur
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
Dimensions
840*414
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