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the dominion of the air-第63章

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cation with the base。  The writer's personal experience of the possibilities afforded by this mode of communication; yet in its infancy; will be given。



CHAPTER XXV。  THE MODERN AIRSHIPIN SEARCH OF THE LEONIDS。


In the autumn of 1898 the aeronautical world was interested to hear that a young Brazilian; M。 Santos Dumont; had completed a somewhat novel dirigible balloon; cylindrical in shape; with conical ends; 83 feet long by 12 feet in diameter; holding 6;500 cubic feet of gas; and having a small compensating balloon of 880 cubic feet capacity。  For a net was substituted a simple contrivance; consisting of two side pockets; running the length of the balloon; and containing battens of wood; to which were affixed the suspension cords; bands being also sewn over the upper part of the balloon connecting the two pockets。  The most important novelty; however; was the introduction of a small petroleum motor similar to those used for motor tricycles。

The inventor ascended in this balloon; inflated with pure hydrogen; from the Jardin d'Acclimatation; Paris; and circled several times round the large captive balloon in the Gardens; after which; moving towards the Bois de Boulogne; he made several sweeps of 100 yards radius。  Then the pump of the compensator caused the engine to stop; and the machine; partially collapsing; fell to the ground。  Santos Dumont was somewhat shaken; but announced his intention of making other trials。  In this bold and successful attempt there was clear indication of a fresh phase in the construction of the airship; consisting in the happy adoption of the modern type of petroleum motor。  Two other hying machines were heard of about this date; one by Professor Giampietre; of Pavia; cigar…shaped; driven by screws; and rigged with masts and sails。  The other; which had been constructed and tested in strict privacy; was the invention of a French engineer; M。 Ader; and was imagined to imitate the essential structure of a bird。  Two steam motors of 20…horse power supplied the power。  It was started by being run on the ground on small wheels attached to it; and it was claimed that before a breakdown occurred the machine had actually raised itself into the air。

Of Santos Dumont the world was presently to know more; and the same must be said of another inventor; Dr。 Barton; of Beckenham; who shortly completed an airship model carrying aeroplanes and operated by clockwork。  In an early experiment this model travelled four miles in twenty…three minutes。

But another airship; a true leviathan; had been growing into stately and graceful proportions on the shores of the Bodenzee in Wurtemberg; and was already on the eve of completion。  Count Zeppelin; a lieut。…general in the German Army; who had seen service in the Franco…German War; had for some years devoted his fortune and energy to the practical study of aerial navigation; and had prosecuted experiments on a large scale。  Eventually; having formed a company with a large capital; he was enabled to construct an airship which in size has been compared to a British man…of…war。  Cigar…shaped; its length was no less than 420 feet; and diameter 40 feet; while its weight amounted to no more than 7;250 lbs。  The framework; which for lightness had been made of aluminium; was; with the object of preventing all the gas collecting at one end of its elongated form; subdivided into seventeen compartments; each of these compartments containing a completely fitted gas balloon; made of oiled cotton and marvellously gas tight。  A steering apparatus was placed both fore and aft; and at a safe distance below the main structure were fixed; also forward and aft; on aluminium platforms; two Daimler motor engines of 16…horse power; working aluminium propellers of four blades at the rate of 1;000 revolutions a minute。  Finally; firmly attached to the inner framework by rods of aluminium; were two cars of the same metal; furnished with buffer springs to break the force of a fall。  The trial trip was not made till the summer followingJune; 1900and; in the meanwhile; experiments had gone forward with another mode of flight; terminating; unhappily; in the death of one of the most expert and ingenious of mechanical aeronauts。

Mr。 Percy S。  Pilcher; now thirty…three years of age; having received his early training in the Navy; retired from the Service to become a civil engineer; and had been for some time a partner in the firm of Wilson and Pilcher。  For four or five years he had been experimenting in soaring flight; using a Lilienthal machine; which he improved to suit his own methods。  Among these was the device of rising off the ground by being rapidly towed by a line against the wind。

At the end of September he gave an exhibition at Stamford Park before Lord Bray and a select party of friendsthis in spite of an unsuitable afternoon of unsteady wind and occasional showers。  A long towing line was provided; which; being passed round pulley blocks and dragged by a couple of horses; was capable of being hauled in at high speed。  The first trial; though ending in an accident; was eminently satisfactory。  The apparatus; running against the wind; had risen some distance; when the line broke; yet the inventor descended slowly and safely with outstretched wings。  The next trial also commenced well; with an easy rise to a height of some thirty feet。  At that point; however; the tail broke with a snap; and the machine; pitching over; fell a complete wreck。  Mr。 Pilcher was found insensible; with his thigh broken; and though no other serious injury was apparent; he succumbed two days afterwards without recovering consciousness。  It was surmised that shrinkage of the canvas of the tail; through getting wet; had strained and broken its bamboo stretcher。

This autumn died Gaston Tissandier; at the age of fifty…six; and in the month of December; at a ripe old age; while still in full possession of intellectual vigour; Mr。 Coxwell somewhat suddenly passed away。  Always keenly interested in the progress of aeronautics; he had but recently; in a letter to the Standard; proposed a well…considered and practical method of employing Montgolfier reconnoitring balloons; portable; readily inflated; and especially suited to the war in South Africa。  Perhaps the last letters of a private nature penned by Mr。 Coxwell were to the writer and his daughter; full of friendly and valuable suggestion; and more particularly commenting on a recent scientific aerial voyage; which proved to be not only sensational; but established a record in English ballooning。

The great train of the November meteors; known as the Leonids; which at regular periods of thirty…three years had in the past encountered the earth's atmosphere; was due; and over…due。  The cause of this; and of their finally eluding observation; need only be very briefly touched on here。  The actual meteoric train is known to travel in an elongated ellipse; the far end of which lies near the confines of the solar system; while at a point near the hither end the earth's orbit runs slantingly athwart it; forming; as it were; a level crossing common to the two orbits; the earth taking some five or six hours in transit。  Calculation shows that the meteor tra
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