Johnny Killmore

Just Add Power: Aviation Gets A Lift Today

The Wright Brothers

December 17, 1903. With names like Wilbur and Orville, they knew they’d have to do something big to impress the ladies. Out in Kill Devil Hills, in the Outer Banks of North Carolina, they waddled their powered glider into the air for that briefest of moments.

With decades of glider pilots making some impressive hops already, reaction to the Wright brothers’ feat was a bit mixed. Many doubted the claim. Some simply didn’t hear about it (newspapers did not have an international “share” button in 1903). But word caught on, and we generally celebrate today as the anniversary of powered flight.
So look up today at one of those fantastic flying machines and imagine for a moment how far we have come. In fact, the length of the Boeing 747 is twice as long as the Wright Brothers first flight. Think about that.
Source: NASA

Fascinated by this photo my entire life, it has never failed to teach me, and on many levels. It taught me the standard-issue lessons the TV likes to bandy about, such as following your dreams or being bold. As an adult I tend to ignore such banter as nothing more than slogans.

I learned more though as I grew. As I learned the Wright Brothers’ story, I also learned about business. Being a dreamer and an innovator doesn’t mean a damn thing if you can’t sell it. You aren’t a hero unless the press release says so. TV and your mamma says “believe in yourself” but if you believe you are innocent of a crime and a jury of your peers doesn’t, let me know how that feels while you ruminate on it in the slammer.

Bicycle mechanics who know how to hustle, by 1910 Orville (left) and Wilbur (right) were trying out the “captains of industry” look. The Wright company spent its existence in patent wars and produced about 120 aircraft according to Wilbur. He dies in 1914 and Orville divested himself of the company shortly after.

The Wright Brothers knew how to build a flying machine, but men like Louis Bleriot would begin make sure the newspapers were paying attention. When he was the first man to fly across the English Channel, people knew before he even had the engine warmed up (the mustachio probably helped a lot too).

I also learned about patent wars and how the system is rigged to be a giant money-funnel to make sure the people with the biggest shovel get the results they want. The entire existence of the Wright Company was spent in court, and they only produced about 120 aircraft in 15 or so years, Wilbur died in 1914, wishing he had spent his time with experiments instead of court hearings. Orville divested a few years later and the company sloshed like flotsam through a series of mergers. It was eventually acquired by the Curtiss company in a sad twist of fate (I will not bring up Glenn Curtiss, the story is sad enough), and disappeared into the aether.

Perhaps the strongest lesson I learned from staring endlessly at pictures of the Wright’s first flight came several times, like hammer blows. At several museums I’ve run into cut-aways and replicas of the engine used in the original Wright Flyer (the craft used two of course), and I understood it was rudimentary. It had no oil pump; you just filled it with oil and that absorbed heat. It was absurdly heavy. The propeller looked like something you bought for $1.25 from the ice cream man, attached to a rubber band.

But seeing one of the actual production models in its mashed together sadness once really showed me what “a wing and a prayer” meant. These guys must have been nuts to think this hunk of metal would do anything but anchor them to the each, catch fire, and send a spinning wooden blade bouncing across the beach.

Reproduction o the 4-cylinder engine (it used 2) used to power the original Wright Flyer. ‘Rudimentary’ is a compliment. Source: National Air & Space Museum

But the aircraft flew. However awkwardly, it flew. And that lesson was valuable. Wilbur & Orville did not wait until technology delivered them the right engine technology. They did not wait until structural engineering textbooks gave them the stress equations needed to hold their wings together, or balance the aircraft in flight. They took what was around them and, if they couldn’t find what they needed, created it themselves.

I need a daily dose of that lesson. Waiting for the right time is never the right game plan. There are certainly times to wait, but you can still be taking action. Saving money, building contacts, taking a course, studying a market trend. None of that sounds like “waiting.” That sounds like “preparing.”

And so, enough talk of the past. Off to our own horizons, and hopefully further than 120 feet. Although, to be fair, by the end of the day, and four flights, they were already at 852 feet. We should all hope to have a day that productive.

(Note: The cover photo is of Wilbur Wright with  French aviator Paul Zens, not Orville.)

And barely a lifetime later, people were already able to create theories about how we never went to the moon. Now that is progress. Source: NASA.gov
Johnny Killmore

Johnny Killmore is a Formula sidecar and motorcycle racer who lives in the Bay Area of California. Fascinated at a young age by machines, Johnny is most comfortable at race tracks, garages, or far away places astride a motorcycle. Having cultivated a life revolving around speed, racing is a natural extension of that. Johnny is also a great story teller so it follows naturally that he would share his adventures and report on the adventures of others. Having formally studied journalism, art, and agriculture, Johnny uses the visual and literary arts to bring to life the challenges, risks, and rewards of living a life at speed.

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