Superb, Joe!  Thanks for sharing photos of this excellent build!

 

Cheers!

Jim

 

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On
Behalf Of [email protected]
Sent: Monday, May 17, 2010 8:34 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [Papermodels II 42152] Santos Dumont Demoiselle

 

I built this recently for a Fiddlers Green modeling contest on the
Papermodellers group. This is the Lad 'n Dad  version sold at Fiddler's. 

 

The tires are rubber O-rings, axle is a toothpick, the rigging is thread.

The rest is paper. All the fine parts were hardened with CA glue for
strength. It's a beautiful kit and well worth the time to build it.

 

JoeG

 

A little history:

Santos-Dumont, who had taken up residence in Paris in 1898, was famous as a
pioneering balloonist and airship pilot. He became interested in powered
aircraft in 1904 when he visited the United States to see the St. Louis
Exposition.  He met Octave Chanute, an American engineer who had designed
several successful gliders, and he learned about the Wright brothers'
powered flights. This encouraged him to conduct his own experiments with
powered aircraft and he started work on a biplane he called the 14-bis.
Although difficult to control, this aircraft completed the first Officially
recorded powered flights in Europe.

Santos-Dumont's crowning achievement was the Demoiselle. He conceived it as
a plane that anyone could use for personal transportation and willingly let
others make use of his design.  The fuselage consisted of a specially
reinforced bamboo boom, and the pilot sat beneath the wing within the
tricycle landing gear. The demoiselle was controlled in flight partially by
a tail unit that functioned both as an elevator and a rudder.  In addition,
another elevator was installed in front of the aircraft, and the pilot could
help control the plane's lateral movement by shifting his weight from one
side to another.

Santos-Dumont's first Demoiselle made two short flights before damaging its
propeller in a crash landing. The aviator then designed improved models, one
of which had a strengthened tail section and a more powerful 35-horsepower
tail engine, and was turned by wing warping. This successful model generated
increased interest in Santos-Dumont's work, and he was able to sell  several
similar aircraft to other fliers.

As the plane designed to popularize flying, the Demoiselle was ahead of its
time. Nevertheless the remarkable little aircraft heralded the future and
remains a tribute to the genius of its designer.

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