登陆注册
14828100000046

第46章

In a lecture before the Royal Society of Arts, reported in Engineering, F. W. Lanchester took the position that practical flight was not the abstract question which some apparently considered it to be, but a problem in locomotive engineering. The flying machine was a locomotive appliance, designed not merely to lift a weight, but to transport it elsewhere, a fact which should be sufficiently obvious. Nevertheless one of the leading scientific men of the day advocated a type in which this, the main function of the flying machine, was overlooked.

When the machine was considered as a method of transport, the vertical screw type, or helicopter, became at once ridiculous. It had, nevertheless, many advocates who had some vague and ill-defined notion of subsequent motion through the air after the weight was raised.

Helicopter Type Useless.

When efficiency of transport was demanded, the helicopter type was entirely out of court. Almost all of its advocates neglected the effect of the motion of the machine through the air on the efficiency of the vertical screws. They either assumed that the motion was so slow as not to matter, or that a patch of still air accompanied the machine in its flight. Only one form of this type had any possibility of success. In this there were two screws running on inclined axles--one on each side of the weight to be lifted. The action of such inclined screw was curious, and in a previous lecture he had pointed out that it was almost exactly the same as that of a bird's wing. In high-speed racing craft such inclined screws were of necessity often used, but it was at a sacrifice of their efficiency. In any case the efficiency of the inclined-screw helicopter could not compare with that of an aeroplane, and that type might be dismissed from consideration so soon as efficiency became the ruling factor of the design.

Must Compete With Locomotive.

To justify itself the aeroplane must compete, in some regard or other, with other locomotive appliances, performing one or more of the purposes of locomotion more efficiently than existing systems. It would be no use unless able to stem air currents, so that its velocity must he greater than that of the worst winds liable to be encountered.

To illustrate the limitations imposed on the motion of an aeroplane by wind velocity, Mr. Lanchester gave the diagrams shown in Figs. 1 to 4. The circle in each case was, he said, described with a radius equal to the speed of the aeroplane in still air, from a center placed "down-wind" from the aeroplane by an amount equal to the velocity of the wind.

Fig. 1 therefore represented the case in which the air was still, and in this case the aeroplane represented by _A_ had perfect liberty of movement in any direction In Fig. 2 the velocity of the wind was half that of the aeroplane, and the latter could still navigate in any direction, but its speed against the wind was only one-third of its speed with the wind.

In Fig. 3 the velocity of the wind was equal to that of the aeroplane, and then motion against the wind was impossible; but it could move to any point of the circle, but not to any point lying to the left of the tangent _A_ _B_. Finally, when the wind had a greater speed than the aeroplane, as in Fig. 4, the machine could move only in directions limited by the tangents _A_ _C_and _A_ _D_.

Matter of Fuel Consumption.

Taking the case in which the wind had a speed equal to half that of the aeroplane, Mr. Lanchester said that for a given journey out and home, down wind and back, the aeroplane would require 30 per cent more fuel than if the trip were made in still air; while if the journey was made at right angles to the direction of the wind the fuel needed would be 15 per cent more than in a calm. This 30 per cent extra was quite a heavy enough addition to the fuel; and to secure even this figure it was necessary that the aeroplane should have a speed of twice that of the maximum wind in which it was desired to operate the machine. Again, as stated in the last lecture, to insure the automatic stability of the machine it was necessary that the aeroplane speed should be largely in excess of that of the gusts of wind liable to be encountered.

Eccentricities of the Wind.

There was, Mr. Lanchester said, a loose connection between the average velocity of the wind and the maximum speed of the gusts. When the average speed of the wind was 40 miles per hour, that of the gusts might be equal or more. At one moment there might be a calm or the direction of the wind even reversed, followed, the next moment, by a violent gust. About the same minimum speed was desirable for security against gusts as was demanded by other considerations. Sixty miles an hour was the least figure desirable in an aeroplane, and this should be exceeded as much as possible. Actually, the Wright machine had a speed of 38 miles per hour, while Farman's Voisin machine flew at 45 miles per hour.

Both machines were extremely sensitive to high winds, and the speaker, in spite of newspaper reports to the contrary, had never seen either flown in more than a gentle breeze. The damping out of the oscillations of the flight path, discussed in the last lecture, increased with the fourth power of the natural velocity of flight, and rapid damping formed the easiest, and sometimes the only, defense against dangerous oscillations. Amachine just stable at 35 miles per hour would have reasonably rapid damping if its speed were increased to 60 miles per hour.

Thinks Use Is Limited.

It was, the lecturer proceeded, inconceivable that any very extended use should be made of the aeroplane unless the speed was much greater than that of the motor car.

It might in special cases be of service, apart from this increase of speed, as in the exploration of countries destitute of roads, but it would have no general utility.

同类推荐
  • 天老神光经

    天老神光经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 评复古记

    评复古记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • Salammbo

    Salammbo

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 求幸福斋随笔

    求幸福斋随笔

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 一字佛顶轮王经

    一字佛顶轮王经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 乡野痞夫

    乡野痞夫

    陈楚被冷艳女杀手之王莫九制服,但没想到竟然被要求当杏花村村长带领乡村致富,万念俱灰中竟然发现杏花村美女如云,更被美女相长薛婷的冷艳美貌吸引,为了保护女乡长不被潜,陈楚只能二十四小时的对她贴身保护……
  • 神话之界面穿梭

    神话之界面穿梭

    无限好书尽在阅文。
  • 像法决疑经

    像法决疑经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 原点的星

    原点的星

    你是我最闪耀的星,可是最后,我们却回到了原点
  • 豪门契约妻

    豪门契约妻

    他是不可一世的“国主”,多少年轻美貌的女人想成为他的榻上客,但他偏偏钟情于一个七岁孩子的娘,而且肚子里还带着一个不知父亲是谁的拖油瓶。偶买噶!他是脑残吗?还是脑子袋被门夹住了!
  • 道图腾

    道图腾

    严肃的道士李云、平和茅山道士王江和欢乐逗x的东北人阴间判官何山在一天晚上偶遇,后成为抗魔铁三角,在人们的背后维持着社会平安的秩序……
  • 快穿兵法

    快穿兵法

    biu~这是一个披着兵法皮子的快穿,我们的宗旨是:干倒敌人,完成任务,撩汉撩妹两手抓。情话小剧场一:习安狂霸酷炫拽地把男人咚到床上,“亲爱的,我觉得你今天一定很累吧。”男人挑眉,“哦?愿闻其详。”“因为你在我心里跑了一整天。”后来这个床很快就散架了...情话小剧场二:购物中心中,“喂,亲爱的,你在哪?”习安瞬间变身查岗女友问道。“我在某个小坏蛋的心里。”电话对面男人邪佞一笑说道。嗯,她家男人变得撩人了。情话小剧场三:“honey,我们来交换礼物好不好?”“好啊。”“从现在开始你是我的,我是你的。”男人深沉的看着面前的女人,扑倒在床上。【本文绝对宠文,保证不虐,虐了作者就...就...就删简介】
  • 国民老公太深情:拒婚100天

    国民老公太深情:拒婚100天

    一场蓄谋已久的意外,她去他家住了三个月,期满后,她怀了他的种逍遥国外,他为了追她回来,又是撒娇又是卖萌,各种招数尽数施尽,最后无奈只要威胁她回归!“余半夏小姐,不服从我就去告你,告你非法侵占我的种,告你歧视,一切告...”“顾先生,你大可以去告,只要你不怕榴莲和戳衣板!尽管去。”顾余年尴尬的笑了笑,冲着余半夏好心的提醒:“老婆,其实,其实咱家还有键盘!”
  • 太古独神

    太古独神

    灵武大世界,群英璀璨,妖孽天骄层出不穷!强者一怒浮尸千里,挥手间改天换地!二十一世纪宅男石毅重生于此,以绝世废体为基,一路逆袭直达巅峰!喝最烈的酒,泡最美的妞,彪悍的人生不需要任何解释!(已有百万完本,坑品保证)
  • 倾城红颜:冰山王妃很变态

    倾城红颜:冰山王妃很变态

    她,是21实际叱咤风云的琉璃公主——魅,杀人如麻,冰冷无情的她,原以为得到了爱情,却在自己的婚礼上被自己的爱人捅了一刀,她心不甘,老天眷顾她,给她了重生的机会,成为了一个丹田破碎,无法修炼灵力,胆小懦弱的叶家废材三小姐。当她睁开双眼,冰冷,犀利,嗜血,的眼神令人心惊胆战。人不犯我,我不犯人;人若犯我,我必加倍还之!宁我负天下,也不可天下负我!