COMPREHENSION PRACTICE
Many great inventions are initially greeted with ridicule and
disbelief. The invention of the airplane was no exception. Although many people
who heard about the first powered flight on December 17, 1903 were excited and
impressed, others reacted with peals of laughter. The idea of flying an
aircraft was repulsive to some people. Such people called Wilbur and Orville
Wright, the inventors of the first flying machine, impulsive fools. Negative
reactions, however, did not stop the Wrights. Impelled by their desire to
succeed, they continued their experiments in aviation.
Orville and Wilbur Wright had always had a compelling interest
in aeronautics and mechanics. As young boys they earned money by making and
selling kites and mechanical toys. Later, they designed a newspaper-folding
machine, built a printing press, and operated a bicycle-repair shop. In 1896,
when they read about the death of Otto Lilienthal, the brothers’ interest in
flight grew into a compulsion.
Lilienthal, a pioneer in hang-gliding, had controlled his
gliders by shifting his body in the desired direction. This idea was repellent
to the Wright brothers, however, and they searched for more efficient methods
to control the balance of airborne vehicles. In 1900 and 1901, the Wrights
tested numerous gliders and developed control techniques. The brothers’
inability to obtain enough lift power for the gliders almost led them to
abandon their efforts.
After further study, the Wright brothers concluded that the
published tables of air pressure on curved surfaces must be wrong. They set up
a wind tunnel and began a series of experiments with model wings. Because of
their efforts, the old tables were repealed in time and replaced by the first
reliable figures for air pressure on curved surfaces. This work, in turn, made
it possible for the brothers to design a machine that would fly. In 1903 the
Wrights built their first airplane, which cost less than $1,000. They even
designed and built their own source of propulsion-a lightweight gasoline
engine. When they started the engine on December 17, the airplane pulsated
wildly before taking off. The plane managed to stay aloft for 12 seconds,
however, and it flew 120 feet.
By 1905, the Wrights had perfected the first airplane that could
turn, circle, and remain airborne for half an hour at a time. Others had flown
in balloons and hang gliders, but the Wright brothers were the first to build a
full-size machine that could fly under its own power. As the contributors of
one of the most outstanding engineering achievements in history, the Wright
brothers are accurately called the fathers of aviation.
- What was the reaction by some
of the people to the Wright brothers’ effort to fly?
- What did the brothers learn
before they made a first perfect plane?
- Why are the Wright brothers
called the fathers of aviation.
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