Wilbur Wright (1867-1912),
American aeronautical engineer who worked with his brother, Orville
Wright, to build and fly the first airplane.
Wilbur, the elder of the two brothers, was born in
Millville, Indiana. He was the third of five Wright children. Their father was a
bishop of the United Brethren Church. Wilbur went to high school in Dayton,
Ohio, with his brother Orville. The boys shared an interest in mechanical things
and learned as much about mathematics and engineering as they could. Wilbur left
high school before finishing his courses, and neither brother formally
graduated. After leaving school, the brothers made several attempts at editing
and printing small local newspapers. In 1892 they formed the Wright Cycle
Company. For the next ten years they designed, built, and sold bicycles.
The Wright brothers must have been aware of the
possibility of powered flight and some of the efforts being made toward that
end. The work of German aeronautical pioneer Otto Lilienthal in the
1890s inspired the Wrights to pursue their own glider and airplane designs.
Lilienthal died in a glider crash in 1896, convincing Wilbur that the stability
of the design and the skill of the pilot were as important as getting an
airplane into the air.
The Wright brothers concentrated on developing techniques
to stabilize and provide directional control for their gliders from 1896 to
1899. In August 1899 they flew a kite with a wingspan of about 1.5 m (5 ft). The
kite incorporated controls that could twist the ends of the wings. This
wing-warping technique provided stability and directional control and was the
forerunner of the idea of ailerons. Ailerons are flaps on the trailing edges of
modern airplane wings that move independently of the wings to provide stability
and steering controls. See Airplane: Control
Components.
In 1900 the Wrights built a larger kite with a 5-m (17-ft)
wingspan that could carry a pilot. They decided to begin their test flights near
Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, because the steady winds provided power for their
flights and the sandy banks made crashing safer for machines and pilots. The
kite flew well and even carried Wilbur for a few seconds of piloted flight.
In July 1901 they returned to Kitty Hawk and built a
wooden glider that had sledlike runners. They worked at Kill Devil Hills, where
there were large sand dunes over which the runners could glide. Their new
machine was longer than the previous model and its wings were arched
differently. It also had a hand-operated elevator—a flap on the horizontal
stabilizer on the tail that could control up-and-down movement. The brothers
again achieved encouraging results, particularly after they experimented with
other wing arches. However, there were still problems with stability and
control.
During late 1901 and early 1902 the Wrights built a small
wind tunnel and tested various wing designs and wing arches. In the course of
these tests, they compiled the first accurate tables of lift and drag, the
important parameters that govern flight and stability. They constructed a new
glider with a 10 m (32 ft) wingspan in mid-1902. At first the glider had two
vertical fins mounted behind the wings. The brothers still found it difficult to
turn with this design, so they transformed the double fin to a single moveable
rudder at the rear of the glider. This configuration proved so successful that
they decided to attempt powered flight the following summer.
During late 1902 and early 1903 they searched in vain for
a suitable engine for their craft and for knowledge of propeller design. No
existing engines that provided the power required were light enough to be
practical to carry aboard an airplane. They eventually constructed their own
9-kilowatt (12-horsepower) motor and made their own propeller, which moved air
very efficiently. After some initial trouble with the propeller shafts, the
first Wright Biplane took to the air and made a successful flight on December
17, 1903, at Kill Devil Hills near Kitty Hawk. The airplane had a wingspan of 12
m (40 ft) and weighed 340 kg (750 lb) with the pilot. The two brothers took
turns flying the plane. Wilbur, in the last of the flights, stayed in the air
for 59 seconds and traveled 260 m (852 ft) at speeds a little under 16 km/h (10
mph).
The following year the Wrights replaced the engine with a
more powerful 12-kilowatt (16-horsepower) engine and separated the rudder
controls from the controls that changed the shape of the wing. They tested their
new model in their hometown of Dayton, learning to make longer flights and
tighter turns.
In 1905 the Wrights were sufficiently confident of their
design to offer it to the United States War Department. The following year they
patented their control system, including the elevator, rudder, and wing-warping
controls. Although they spent time patenting and finding markets for their
machines during the next few years, they did not feel sufficiently confident to
exhibit their airplanes publicly until 1908. That year Wilbur demonstrated the
plane in France, while Orville flew in the United States. In 1909 Wilbur flew in
Italy and Orville in Berlin, Germany. The airplanes were now sufficiently well
controlled and stable enough to allow Wilbur to make a flight of 32 km (20
miles) in the United States.
During the next few years the brothers and their Wright
Company continued building airplanes, but their competitors gained ground. In
1912 Wilbur died in Dayton, Ohio, of typhoid fever. By 1918 the Wrights’ patents
were under pressure.
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