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Winter 1999
A series of static tests showed that our reproduction of the 1902 Wright Glider has some design flaws that will make it difficult to fly. The most serious of these flaws are an aft center of gravity and an improperly balanced elevator. In the interest of safety, we have decided to build a second "stand off" replica with an adjustable CG and controls for flight testing.
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We got it on the runway; we just didn't get it off the ground. |
Summer 1999 For almost a century, the business records of the Wright Company -- the airplane manufacturing business that Wilbur and Orville Wright began in 1909 -- have been presumed lost or destroyed. Then, a few years ago, they mysteriously reappeared. first-to-fly.com is working to purchase these documents for the Wright State Libraries, Special Collections and Archives, where they will be made available to the public for the first time ever. |
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on the pictures to enlarge them.![]() The Wright Company buildings in 1911. These buildings still exist. |
Summer 1999 To help raise the $900,000 needed to purchase these documents and make them available to historians and scholars the world over, first-to-fly.com will give a full-size, flying, historically accurate replica of the 1902 Wright Glider to whatever business, institution, or individual gives us the first $100,000 to kick off our capital campaign. |
first-to-fly.com volunteers assemble the frame of a replica 1902 Wright Glider. |
Winter 1999
Although we're not yet flying the glider, we are touring it. We've rolled our 1902 glider, 1901 wind tunnel, 1899 kite, and 1878 "bat" replicas into a portable museum that is now traveling to schools, museums, and other educational institutions. We've also developed a number of unique stands that allow us to display the glider in different ways, depending on the event and the people who are viewing it. We can mount it a kids-eye level to get schoolchildren up close and personal with the work of the Wright brothers. We can rest the flying machine 8 feet in the air so people can walk around or dine beneath it. We can even roll it down the street in a parade!
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"We just flew in from Dayton and had some engine trouble -- the trouble was, we didn't have any engine -- so we decided your schoolyard would make a nice spot for an emergency landing..." |
Summer 1999 What's so important about the Wright Company papers? For decades, the early history of the aviation industry in this country has been shrouded in mystery. Few history books spend more than a few pages on the Wright Company, even though it was a keystone in this fledgling business. These rediscovered documents clear up many of the questions that have puzzled historians for decades. "This is like finding a secret room with letter after letter after letter," says Joe Gertler, current owner of the documents. "There are nine filing drawers full of documents and on every page there's a new revelation." |
![]() The incorporation papers of the Wright Company -- one of the many treasures in the rediscovered documents. |
The
1903 Centennial Flyer
We are helping young people across the United States to build a replica of the 1903 Wright Flyer, the first airplane to make a controlled, sustained, powered flight. With the help of volunteers, we will conduct workshops for kids, teaching them basic aerodynamics and the history of the Wright Brothers. In these workshops, the kids will make ribs for a Wright Flyer and sign them. They will send these signed ribs to Dayton, where we will assemble them into an airplane. The completed 1903 Centennial Flyer will be unveiled at the Dayton International Airport on December 17, 2002. |
![]() Building ribs for the Centennial Flyer at Home Depot in Copaige, New York. |
1903 Wright Flyer To Perform at Dayton Air ShowWould you like to see a replica of the 1903 Wright Flyer take to the skies? Better yet, would you like to fly it yourself? Well, now you can and you can see this wonderful Flyer fly at the Dayton Air Show in Dayton, OH on July 20 and 21, 1902. Actually, you will see three flying 1903 Flyer replicas, all of which you can build and fly yourself from laser-cut kits. Over the last few years, veteran model-designer Pat Tritle has developed three different flying models of the Flyer, each powered by a different means. There is a radio-controlled Flyer with electric motors, a rubber band-powered Flyer, and a Flyer replica that can be flown as a glider. |
![]() Pat Tritle with his radio-controlled 1903 Wright Flyer.
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