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The Coastwatcher
13 JUN-CTWG Op Eval TRANEX TBA-JUL CTWG Encampment 21-23 AUG-CTWG/USAF Evaluation Missions for 15-23 AUG-NER Glider Academy@KSVF America 26-29 AUG-CAP National Conference Semper vigilans! 12 SEP-Cadet Ball-USCGA Semper volans! CADET MEETING REPORT The Coastwatcher 24 February, 2015 Publication of the Thames River Composite Squadron Connecticut Wing Maj Roy Bourque outlined the Squadron Civil Air Patrol Rocketry Program and set deadlines for Cadet submission of plans. 300 Tower Rd., Groton, CT http://ct075.org . The danger of carbon monoxide poisoning was the subject of the safety meeting. C/2dLt Jessica LtCol Stephen Rocketto, Editor Carter discussed the prevention and detection of [email protected] this hazardous gas and opened up the forum to comments and questions from the Cadets. C/CMSgt Virginia Poe, Scribe C/SMSgt Michael Hollingsworth, Printer's Devil C/CMSgt Virginia Poe delivered her Armstrong Lt David Meers & Maj Roy Bourque, Papparazis Lecture on the “The Daily Benefits of the Hap Rocketto, Governor-ASOQB, Feature Editor Aerospace Program.” Vol. IX 9.08 25 February, 2015 Maj Brendan Schultz delivered his Eaker Lecture explaining the value of leadership skills learned in SCHEDULE OF COMING EVENT the Cadet Program and encouraged Cadets to apply their learning to the world outside of CAP. 03 MAR-TRCS Staff Meeting 10 MAR-TRCS Meeting C/SrA Thomas Turner outlined the history of 17 MAR-TRCS Meeting rocket propulsion from Hero's Aeopile to the 21 MAR-CTWG WWII Gold Medal Ceremony landing on the moon. He then explained each of 24 MAR-TRCS Meeting Newton's Three Laws of Dynamics and showed 31 MAR-TRCS Meeting their applications to rocketry. -
3-VIEWS - TABLE of CONTENTS to Search: Hold "Ctrl" Key Then Press "F" Key
3-VIEWS - TABLE of CONTENTS To search: Hold "Ctrl" key then press "F" key. Enter manufacturer or model number in search box. Click your back key to return to the search page. It is highly recommended to read Order Instructions and Information pages prior to selection. Aircraft MFGs beginning with letter A ................................................................. 3 B ................................................................. 6 C.................................................................10 D.................................................................14 E ................................................................. 17 F ................................................................. 18 G ................................................................21 H................................................................. 23 I .................................................................. 26 J ................................................................. 26 K ................................................................. 27 L ................................................................. 28 M ................................................................30 N................................................................. 35 O ................................................................37 P ................................................................. 38 Q ................................................................40 R................................................................ -
The Reims Air Races
Reims Air races and the Gordon Bennett Trophy Bleriot's cross-Channel flight excited Europe as nothing else had. The City of Reims and the French vintners of the Champagne region decided to sponsor a week of aviation exhibition and competition, putting up large purses in prize money, the most prestigious being the International Aviation Cup, known as the Gordon Bennett Trophy, after its sponsor, James Gordon Bennett, the flamboyant American publisher of the New York Herald and the Paris Herald. The meet attracted the cream of European society, from royalty and generals to ambassadors and the merely wealthy, to the Betheny Plain outside Reims from August 22 to 29, 1909. While there were to be many other such meets before and after World War 1, none would match Reims for grandeur and elegance or for sheer excitement. The major European manufacturers, all French, entered various events. There were 'planes by Bleriot, Voisin, Antoinette, and Farman, and even several French-built Wrights. The Wrights themselves had passed on an invitation to race at Reims, which was awkward since the Gordon Bennett Trophy was crowned with a large replica of a Wright Flyer. The Aero Club of America, which had sponsored the Scientific American trophy won by Curtiss a year earlier, turned to Curtiss. Curtiss' June Bug was not as well developed a plane as the Wright machines (and possibly the Wrights were hoping to drive this point home if Curtiss failed at Reims) and while it was more maneuverable than the European planes, it was not nearly as fast. 1909 Voisin 1 Curtiss worked feverishly to produce a more powerful engine and stripped down his airplane to give it greater speed. -
100 Years of Flight in Texas
100 Years of Flight in Texas First Flight Friday, February 18th, 1910 was supposed to be a better day. The day before had provided the typical windy, cool con- ditions of mid-winter along the upper Gulf Coast. After assem- bling his fleet of air- planes and preparing them to make their at- tention getting circles around the muddy field, air show “King” Louis Paulhan had waited just a bit too long. By late afternoon the winds were too high to fly the delicate Farman biplane or the difficult to control Bleriot monoplanes. The crowd that had assembled was unhappy. They had each paid $1 to see one of the new “aeroplanes” fly. Many had taken the day off from work, or skipped school! The show pro- moters, the Houston Post and The Western Land Company, wanted to draw a crowd down to South Hous- ton to show off their housing development. What better way than with a demonstration of the “new fan- gled” flying machines! Paulhan had been making a long, slow trek across the United States on his way back to New York. After a rousing success at the Los Angeles Air Show and Race in January, he was riding the rails to a variety of stops before reaching the grim, overcast and windy Texas coast. His crew of two, along with he and his wife, arrived by rail on Tuesday. By Wednesday their airplanes had been partially assembled and trucked, by horse no less, to a field at the cor- ner of Spencer and Galveston Highways. Sod- den, the field would have to do, as he had to fly to secure his “sponsorship” from the promot- ers. -
André Beaumont Et Les Hydravions Schreck-FBA
André BEAUMONT et les hydravions Schreck-F.B.A. Par Gérard Hartmann Pionnier de l’aéronautique Jean, Louis Conneau est né le 8 février 1880 temps 1909 le capitaine Ferber promu forma- à Lodève dans l’Hérault. Il passe sa jeunesse à teur à la Ligue Nationale Aérienne y fait un tour Paris au sein d’une famille bourgeoise aisée de de piste de 3 kilomètres en 3 minutes à 15 médecins et de militaires. Son père est officier, mètres de hauteur sur son biplan Voisin. C’est à son grand-père médecin personnel de Napoléon Port-Aviation que Blériot a commencé la mise III. Après des études secondaires brillantes, il au point de son Blériot XI-Anzani avec lequel il entre dans la Marine nationale, pour y effectuer vole 58 minutes fin juin 1909 et qui lui permet son service militaire tout d’abord, entre 1902 et de traverser la Manche un mois plus tard. C’est 1905, où il sort avec le grade d’enseigne de également à Port-Aviation que va naître le pre- vaisseau, puis comme militaire, de 1906 à mier hydravion à coque, construit au printemps 1910. 1911. C’est à Juvisy que Conneau y rencontre En décembre 1910, brevet de pilote son constructeur : François Denhaut. d’aéroplane de l’Aéro-Club de France en poche, Après le lieutenant Tricornot de Rose (brevet Conneau prend congé de la Marine. Il fait par- militaire n° 1) futur créateur des escadrilles tie du premier groupe de pilotes de la Marine dans l’aviation de chasse française, le lieutenant nationale, un groupe expérimental dirigé par Princeteau et le lieutenant De Malherbe, il ob- l’amiral Boué de Lapeyrère. -
Up from Kitty Hawk Chronology
airforcemag.com Up From Kitty Hawk Chronology AIR FORCE Magazine's Aerospace Chronology Up From Kitty Hawk PART ONE PART TWO 1903-1979 1980-present 1 airforcemag.com Up From Kitty Hawk Chronology Up From Kitty Hawk 1903-1919 Wright brothers at Kill Devil Hill, N.C., 1903. Articles noted throughout the chronology provide additional historical information. They are hyperlinked to Air Force Magazine's online archive. 1903 March 23, 1903. First Wright brothers’ airplane patent, based on their 1902 glider, is filed in America. Aug. 8, 1903. The Langley gasoline engine model airplane is successfully launched from a catapult on a houseboat. Dec. 8, 1903. Second and last trial of the Langley airplane, piloted by Charles M. Manly, is wrecked in launching from a houseboat on the Potomac River in Washington, D.C. Dec. 17, 1903. At Kill Devil Hill near Kitty Hawk, N.C., Orville Wright flies for about 12 seconds over a distance of 120 feet, achieving the world’s first manned, powered, sustained, and controlled flight in a heavier-than-air machine. The Wright brothers made four flights that day. On the last, Wilbur Wright flew for 59 seconds over a distance of 852 feet. (Three days earlier, Wilbur Wright had attempted the first powered flight, managing to cover 105 feet in 3.5 seconds, but he could not sustain or control the flight and crashed.) Dawn at Kill Devil Jewel of the Air 1905 Jan. 18, 1905. The Wright brothers open negotiations with the US government to build an airplane for the Army, but nothing comes of this first meeting. -
The History of Danish Military Aircraft Volume 1 Danish Military Aircraft Introduction
THE HISTORY OF DANISH MILITARY AIRCRAFT VOLUME 1 DANISH MILITARY AIRCRAFT INTRODUCTION This is a complete overview of all aircraft which has served with the Danish military from the first feeble start in 1912 until 2017 Contents: Volume 1: Introduction and aircraft index page 1-4 Chapter 1 - Marinens Flyvevæsen (Navy) page 5-14 Chapter 2 - Hærens Flyvertropper (Army) page 15-30 Chapter 3 – 1940-45 events page 31-36 Chapter 4 – Military aircraft production page 37-46 Chapter 5 – Flyvevåbnet (RDAF) page 47-96 Volume 2: Photo album page 101-300 In this Volume 1 Each of the five overview chapters shows a chronological list of the aircraft used, then a picture of each type in operational paintscheme as well as some special colourschemes used operationally and finally a list of each aircraft’s operational career. The material has been compiled from a multitude of sources the first of which is my research in the Danish National and Military archives, the second is material from the archives of Flyvevåbnet with which I had a fruitful cooperation in the years 1966 to 1980 and the third are the now (fortunately) many books and magasines as well as the Internet which contains information about Danish military aircraft. The pictures in Volume 1 and Volume 2-the photo album- have mainly been selected from the viewpoint of typicality and rarety and whereever possible pictures of operational aircraft in colour has been chosen. Most of the b/w picures in some way originate from the FLV historical archives, some were originally discovered there by me, whereas others have surfaced later. -
The Voisin Biplane by Robert G
THE VOISIN BIPLANE BY ROBERT G. WALDVOGEL A single glance at the Voisin Biplane reveals exactly what one would expect of a vintage aircraft: a somewhat ungainly design with dual, fabric-covered wings; a propeller; an aerodynamic surface protruding ahead of its airframe; and a boxy, kite-resembling tail. But, by 1907 standards, it had been considered “advanced.” Its designer, Gabriel Voisin, son of a provincial engineer, was born in Belleville, France, in 1880, initially demonstrating mechanical and aeronautical aptitude through his boat, automobile, and kite interests. An admirer of Clement Ader, he trained as an architect and draftsman at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Lyon, and was later introduced to Ernest Archdeacon, a wealthy lawyer and aviation enthusiast, who subsequently commissioned him to design a glider. Using inaccurate and incomplete drawings of the Wright Brothers’ 1902 glider published in L’Aerophile, the Aero-Club’s journal, Voisin constructed an airframe in January of 1904 which only bore a superficial resemblance to its original. Sporting dual wings subdivided by vertical partitions, a forward elevating plane, and a two-cell box-kite tail, it was devoid of the Wright-devised wing- warping method, and therefore had no means by which lateral control could be exerted. Two-thirds the size of the original, it was 40 pounds lighter. Supported by floats and tethered to a Panhard-engined racing boat, the glider attempted its first fight from the Seine River on June 8, 1905, as described by Voisin himself. “Gradually and cautiously, (the helmsman) took up the slack of my towing cable…” he had written. -
1910 Los Angeles International Aviation Meet Research Collection SPC.1996.001
http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt4m3nc8jw Online items available Inventory of the 1910 Los Angeles International Aviation Meet Research Collection SPC.1996.001 Jennifer Allan Goldman, 1996; updated in 2019 by Reyes Contreras California State University Dominguez Hills, Gerth Archives and Special Collections updated 2019 University Library South -5039 (Fifth Floor) 1000 E. Victoria St. Carson, CA 90747 [email protected] URL: https://www.csudh.edu/libarchives/ SPC.1996.001 1 Contributing Institution: California State University Dominguez Hills, Gerth Archives and Special Collections Title: 1910 Los Angeles International Aviation Meet Research Collection source: Grenier, Judson Identifier/Call Number: SPC.1996.001 Physical Description: 10 boxes Physical Description: 4 Linear Feet Date (inclusive): 1909-1999; undated Abstract: This collection includes newsclippings, photos, books, journal articles, ephemera, correspondence, and minutes related to the aviation meet held on Dominguez Hill in 1910. Subjects include: early aviation history and early aviators; the Aviation Meet of Los Angeles (1910-1911); anniversaries; a commemorative airshow; and the Aviation Meet Committee. Material from the collection is available online by visiting the 1910 Los Angeles International Aviation Meet Research Digital Collection . oversize material related to this collection is located in map case 2, drawer 11. Language of Material: Collection material is in English. Conditions Governing Access There are no access restrictions on this collection. Conditions Governing Use All requests for permission to publish or quote from manuscripts must be submitted in writing to the Director of Archives and Special Collections. Permission for publication is given on behalf of Special Collections as the owner of the physical materials and not intended to include or imply permission of the copyright holder, which must also be obtained. -
Gabriel Voisin
GABRIEL VOISIN Originaire de Belleville, Gabriel Voisin nait le 5 février 1880. Son père, industriel de la fonderie, voit ses affaires péricliter peu à peu après la guerre de 1870 et ferme son entreprise en 1882, année de naissance de son deuxième fils Charles. Il meurt en 1886 laissant une veuve désargentée et quatre enfants. Leur existence est alors assurée par leur grand-père maternel qui héberge chez lui, à Lyon, sa fille et ses trois petits enfants. Pendant les vacances, la famille s'installe à euville à proximité de l'usine familiale et les deux garçons s'initient rapidement à la petite mécanique. A l'âge de 15 ans, Gabriel a déjà fabriqué un fusil qui sera sa première arme de chasse, une bicyclette et un petit modèle de machine à vapeur. Son frère Charles préfère la menuiserie. Les bords de Saône deviennent très vite leur territoire de jeux et de chasse. Excellent mais turbulent élève au lycée Ampère, il entre aux Beaux-arts de Lyon tout en travaillant comme dessinateur dans un Bureau d'Etudes dirigé par un ingénieur des Arts et Métiers. Il sort d'école en 1903 et débute sa carrière chez Ernest Archdeacon, un des promoteurs et mécènes de l'aéronautique naissante. Il s'illustre très vite dans le domaine de l'aviation. En 1905, il modifie, grâce au financement de son employeur, un planeur en hydravion et décolle sur la Seine à Billancourt remorqué par une vedette rapide. Le vol se fait à une altitude de 15 mètres sur une longueur de 600 mètres. -
The Forty-Sixth Harmon Memorial Lecture in Military History
THE FORTY-SIXTH HARMON MEMORIAL LECTURE IN MILITARY HISTORY The Wright Brothers and the Birth of the Air Age Tom D. Crouch United States Air Force Academy 2003 2 The Wright Brothers and the Birth of the Air Age TOM D. CROUCH National Air and Space Museum THE HARMON MEMORIAL LECTURES IN MILITARY HISTORY NUMBER FORTY-SIX United States Air Force Academy Colorado 2003 3 THE HARMON LECTURES IN MILITARY HISTORY The oldest and most prestigious lecture series at the Air Force Academy, the Harmon Memorial Lectures in Military History originated with Lieutenant General Hubert R. Harmon, the Academy's first superintendent (1954-1956) and a serious student of military history. General Harmon believed that history should play a vital role in the new Air Force Academy curriculum. Meeting with the History Department on one occasion, he described General George S. Patton, Jr.'s visit to the West Point library before departing for the North African campaign. In a flurry of activity Patton and the librarians combed the West Point holdings for historical works that might be useful to him in the coming months. Impressed by Patton's regard for history and personally convinced of history's great value, General Harmon believed that cadets should study the subject during each of their four years at the Academy. General Harmon fell ill with cancer soon after launching the Air Force Academy at Lowry Air Force Base in Denver in 1954. He died in February 1957. He had completed a monumental task over the preceding decade as the chief planner for the new service academy and as its first superintendent. -
Annual Privatization Report 2021 — Aviation
ANNUAL PRIVATIZATION REPORT: AVIATION by Robert W. Poole, Jr. Project Director: Austill Stuart July 2021 Reason Foundation’s mission is to advance a free society by developing, applying, and promoting libertarian principles, including individual liberty, free markets, and the rule of law. We use journalism and public policy research to influence the frameworks and actions of policymakers, journalists, and opinion leaders. Reason Foundation’s nonpartisan public policy research promotes choice, competition, and a dynamic market economy as the foundation for human dignity and progress. Reason produces rigorous, peer- reviewed research and directly engages the policy process, seeking strategies that emphasize cooperation, flexibility, local knowledge, and results. Through practical and innovative approaches to complex problems, Reason seeks to change the way people think about issues, and promote policies that allow and encourage individuals and voluntary institutions to flourish. Reason Foundation is a tax-exempt research and education organization as defined under IRS code 501(c)(3). Reason Foundation is supported by voluntary contributions from individuals, foundations, and corporations. The views are those of the author, not necessarily those of Reason Foundation or its trustees. TABLE OF CONTENTS PART 1 INTRODUCTION ................................................................................................................... 1 PART 2 AIRPORTS ............................................................................................................................