In Earnest At Last.
The following appeared in one of our public journals
of the date
indicated
To the Editor of the Tribune.
SIR: You rightly appreciate the interest
with which the popular
mind regards all efforts in the direction of navigating
the air.
One man of my acquaintance was deeply interested to
know the
results of the California Experiment, because he alone,
as he believed,
had questioned Nature and learned from her the great
secret of aerial
navigation.
To-day’s Tribune brings us the full account
of the machine, its
performance and modus operandi; and without
the authority of my
friend, I can pronounce at once that the thing is
simply ridiculous. It is
the same old useless effort, with the same impossible
agents. But to-day,
within twenty miles of Trinity steeple, lives the
man who can give to
the world the secret of navigating the air, in calm
or in storm, with
the wind or against it; skimming the earth, or in
the highest currents,
just as he wills, with all the ease, and all the swiftness,
and all the
exactitude of a bird.
My friend is only waiting for an opportunity to perfect
his plan, when
he will make it known.
Yours truly,
W.H.K.
New York; June 14th, 1869.
Two years have passed and no progress has been made
in aerial
navigation.
The California Experiment failed. The great Airship
“CITY OF NEW
YORK,” had previously escaped the same fate,
only because more prudent
than her successor she declined a trial. The
promising and ambitious
enterprise of Mr. Henson has hardly been spoken of
for a quarter of a
century. And notwithstanding the fact that the
number of ascensions in
balloons in the United States and Europe must be counted
by thousands,
and although the exigencies of recent wars have made
them useful, yet
it must be confessed that the art of navigating the
air remains in
much the same state in which the brothers Montgolfiers
left it at the
close of the last century.
The reason for this want of progress in the art referred
to, is not to
be sought in any want of interest in the subject,
or of enthusiasm in
prosecuting experiments. Certainly not for want
of interest in the
subject because to fly, has been the great
desideratum of
the race since Adam. And we find in the literature
of every age
suggestions for means of achieving flight through
the air, in
imitation of birds; or for the construction of ingenious
machines for
aerial navigation. And if history and traditions
are to be credited,
it would be equally an error to suppose that our age
alone had
attempted to put theory into practice in reference
to navigating the
air.
Even the fables of the ancients abound with stories
about flying: that
of Dedalus and his son Icarius, will occur to every
reader. And the
representations of the POETS, and the allusions in
HOLY WRIT equally
prove how natural and dear to the mind of man is the
idea of
possessing “wings like a dove.”
But it is safe enough to assert, that hitherto, all
attempts at
navigating the air have been failures.
Floating through the atmosphere in a balloon, at the
mercy not only of
every wind but of every breath of air,
is in no adequate
sense aerial navigation. And I do not hesitate
to say, that balloons
are absolutely incapable of being directed.
All the analogies by which inventors have been encouraged
in their
expectations are false, the rudders of ships and the
tails of birds
are no exceptions. They will never be able to
guide balloons as
sailors do ships, by a rudder, because ships do not
float suspended
in the water as balloons float in the air; nor do
birds float
through the air in any sense. They are not bouyant lighter
than the
element in which they move, but immensely heavier;
besides they do not
guide themselves wholly by their tails. We may
depend upon it, if we
ever succeed in navigating the air, it will be by
a strict adherence
to the principles upon which birds fly, and a close
imitation of the
means which they employ to effect that object.
It is true, that in respect to the means to be employed,
animals
designed by the Creator for flight, have greatly the
advantage of us,
but what natural deficiencies will not human ingenuity
supply, and
what obstacles will not human skill overcome?
It has already triumphed
over much greater than any that Nature has interposed
between man and
the pleasures of aerial communication.
We have to a great extent, mastered the mysterious
elements of nature.
We have conquered the thunderbolt and learned to write
with the
burning fluid out of which it is forged.
We have converted the boundless ocean into a vast
highway, traversed
for our use and on our errands, by the swift agent,
and by great ships
driven against wind and tide by the mighty power of
steam.
And yet a single generation ago, we knew nothing of
all this, Our
grand-sires would have given these achievements a
prominent place in
the list of impossible things.
But, do you say, “the Creator never intended
us to
fly therefore, it is impossible.”
For what did the Creator give us skill and boundless
perseverance?
Was it designed that we should swim, more than
that we should
furnish ourselves with wings and mount up as eagles?
“We sink like
lead in the mighty waters,” we only fall a little
faster through the
air.
Still, I grant that the problem of aerial navigation
will only be
solved when the principles of flight are clearly understood,
and we
recognize precisely what are the obstacles which prevent
us from
flying by artificial means.
Will these obstacles prove insuperable? It is
at present believed by
the multitude that they will, but I entertain a different
opinion,
most decidedly.
From my earliest youth this subject has occupied my
thoughts. It
has been the study of my life, and I modestly trust
that I have not
questioned nature and science in vain.
In the first place, I undertook to make myself familiar
with the
obstacles to be overcome. I found the greatest
of these to be gravity.
I found, however, that heavy fowls, who were unable
to rise from
the earth, and only accomplished flight by taking
advantage of an
eminence, sustained themselves without difficulty
when once fairly
embarked. I also found that the best flyers were
not equal to the feat
of keeping me company, when walking at my usual pace;
hence I inferred
that velocity was a necessary element in flight,
and that
gravity, so fatal to human attempts to fly, might
be made a powerful
auxiliary when rightly used.
Acting upon this hint, I made experiments with heavy
barn yard fowls,
and finally constructed a light apparatus to be operated
by myself,
using, principally, my feet as a motive power, which
I repeatedly
tried with various and constantly increasing
degrees of
success.
Now I am satisfied that my system is right. It
is my sober conviction
that the time to realize the dream and hope of ages
has come.
Startling as the announcement may be, I propose not
only to make short
excursions through the air myself, but to teach others
to do the same.
Yet, knowing perfectly the obstacles in the way of
flight, and knowing
equally well how to overcome them, I am yet well aware
that I must
perfect my knowledge by practice before entire success
can be
achieved.
This is only reasonable.
How was it with the swimmer; how was it with the agile
and dexterous
skater; how with the acrobat, and what but practice
has just enabled
WESTON to walk one hundred and twelve miles in twenty-four
hours, and
four hundred miles in five days?
For want of a better name, I will call the machine
upon which I am to
practice, the “Instructor.” It is
simple, but it gives the learner
just what he wants an endless series of
inclined planes.
It will prevent accidents, and until the student has
mastered the
mechanical movements necessary to flight, will supplement
his efforts
by partially balancing his weight.
It consists of a beam fifty feet long, poised and
attached by a
universal joint to the top of a form post, say twenty
feet or more in
height. Upon one end of this beam the practitioner
stands, arrayed in
his wings. A movable weight at the other end
completes the apparatus;
and yet this simple machine, will form the entering
wedge to aerial
navigation.
And now methinks I see you smile, but, my unbelieving
friends, let me
remind you that COPERNICUS, and GALILEO, and FRANKLIN,
and FULTON,
and MORSE, all better men than your humble
servant, were laughed at
before me.
Their work is done. Their monuments stand
in all lands, and yet
one of this band of truly great and worthy
names still lives,
and to him I am indebted for many kind and encouraging
words.
It is little besides this that I ask of you.
The stock which
you are solicited to take in this enterprise is small.
But enable me
by your patronage to devote myself for a time wholly
to my project.
See to it, that I do not fail for want of support.
Buy my little
pamphlet at its insignificant cost, ask your friends
to do so; and
should any of you wish to contribute anything more
to this cause,
which I have made my own, and which I am determined
to push to
a triumphant issue, he may be sure that he will receive
the
acknowledgments of a grateful and earnest man, who
has himself devoted
to it the aspirations and efforts of a long life,
and who is still
willing to take all the risks of failure upon himself.
The undersigned would be pleased to have friends interested
in this
subject, call upon him, when the matter will be more
fully described.
ROBERT HARDLEY,
17 PERRY STREET, or
114 Sixth Ave., coth St.
REMARKS ON THE ELLIPSOIDAL BALLOON
PROPELLED BY THE
Archimedean Screw,
DESCRIBED AS THE NEW AERIAL MACHINE,
NOW EXHIBITING AT THE ROYAL ADELAIDE GALLERY, LOWTHER
ARCADE, STRAND.
REMARKS, &c.
The object proposed in the construction of the Machine
which is here
presented to the public view, is simply to illustrate
and establish
the fact, that, by a proper disposition of parts and
the application
of a sufficient power, it is possible to effectuate
the propulsion or
guidance of a Balloon through the air, and thus to
prepare the way for
the more perfect accomplishment of this most interesting
and desirable
result.
In the contrivance of this design, one of the first
effects aimed
at was to reduce the resistance experienced by the
Balloon in its
progress, which is greater or less according to the
magnitude and
shape of its opposing surface. To this intent
is the peculiar
form of the Balloon, which is an Ellipsoid
or prolate
spheroid, the axis of which is twice its minor
diameter; in
other words, twice as long as it is broad. By
this construction the
opposition to the progress of the Balloon in the direction
of either
end is only one half of what it would be, had
it been a Balloon
of the ordinary spherical form and of the same diametrical
magnitude.
For the exact determination of this proportion we
are more
particularly indebted to the researches of Sir George
Cayley, a
distinguished patron of the art, who, a few years
back, instituted a
series of experiments with a view to ascertain the
comparative amounts
of resistance developed by bodies of different forms
in passing
through the air; the results of which he communicated
to the world in
an essay first published in the Mechanic’s Magazine,
and afterwards in
a separate pamphlet. According to these experiments
it appears, that
the opposition which an ellipsoid or oval (of the
nature of the
Balloon, if we may so call it, in the model) is calculated
to
encounter in proceeding endways through the
atmosphere is only
one-sixth of what a plane or flat
surface of equal area with its
largest vertical section, would experience at the
same rate; while the
resistance to the progress of a globe, such as the
usual Balloon, would
be one third of that due to a similar circular plane
of like diameter:
shewing an advantage, in respect of diminished resistance,
in favour of
the former figure, to the extent we have above described;
an advantage it
enjoys along with an increased capacity for containing
gas the cubical contents of an ellipsoid
of the proportions here observed, being exactly double
of those of an ordinary Balloon of equal diameter,
and consequently competent to the support of twice
the weight.
Independent of the advantage of reduced
resistance in this form, there is another of nearly,
if not quite, equal importance, in the facility it
affords of directing its course; an object scarcely,
if at all, attainable with a Balloon of the usual
description however powerfully invested with the means
of motion; as any one will readily perceive who has
ever noticed or experienced the difficulty, or rather
the impossibility, of guiding a tub afloat in the
water, compared with the condition of a boat or other
similarly constructed body, in the same element.
The efficacy of this provision and its necessity will
appear more forcibly when we observe that whenever
the Balloon in the machine here described is thrown
out of its direct bearing by the shifting of the net-work
which connects it with the hoop, or by any other accident
whereby its position is altered with respect to the
propelling power, its course is immediately affected,
and it ceases to progress in a straight line, following
the direction of its major axis, unless corrected
by the intervention of a sufficient rudder.
The second object, after establishing
a proper form for the floating body, was to contrive
a disposition of striking surface that should be able
to realise the greatest amount of propulsive re-action,
in proportion to its magnitude and the force of its
operation, which it is possible to accomplish.
To shew by what steps and in consequence of what reasoning
this point was determined as in the plan adopted, would
occupy considerably more space than the few pages we
have to spare would admit of our devoting to it.
Suffice it to say that of all the means of creating
a resistance in the atmosphere capable of being applied
to the propulsion of the Balloon, the Archimedean Screw
was ascertained to be undoubtedly the best. It
is true that by a direct impact or stroke upon
the air, as for instance by the action of a fan, or
the wafting of any flat surface at right
angles to its own plane, the maximum effect is
accomplished which such a surface is capable of producing
with a given power. The mechanical difficulties,
however, which attend the employment of such a mode
of operation are more than sufficient to counterbalance
any advantage in point of actual resistance which
it may happen to possess; at least in any application
of it which has hitherto been tried or proposed:
so that here, as in the case of ships propelled by
steam, the oblique impact obtained by the rotation
of the striking surface is found to be the most conducive
to the desired result; and of these, that arrangement
which is termed the Archimedean Screw is the most
effective.
The result aimed at, being the development
of the greatest amount of re-action in the direction
of the axis of revolution, it is not enough to have
determined the general character of the instrument
to be employed; the proper disposition or inclination
of its parts becomes a question of the first importance.
According as the turns of the screw are more
or less oblique with respect to the air they strike
or the axis on which they revolve, more or less of
the resistance they generate by their rotation becomes
resolved, as it is technically expressed, in
the direction of the intended course: in other
words, converted to the purpose in view, namely, the
propulsion of the Balloon.
Our limited space here again prevents
us from entering into a detail of the experiments
by means of which the true solution of this question
has been arrived at, and the proper angle determined
at which the superficial spiral exercises the greatest
amount of propulsive force of which such an engine
is capable. These experiments have been chiefly
carried on by Mr. Smith, the ingenious and successful
adapter of this instrument to the propulsion of steam
vessels, for a series of years, with the greatest
care, and at a very considerable expense; and the
result of his experience gives an angle of about 67
deg. or 68 deg. for the outer circumference
of the screw, as that productive of the maximum effect;
a conclusion which is further verified by the experiments
of Sir George Cayley, of Mr. Charles Green, the most
celebrated of our practical aeronauts, and others who
have employed their attention upon the subject.
This conclusion requires only one modification, which
ought to be noticed; namely, that in cases of extreme
velocity, the number of the angle may be still further
increased with advantage, until an inclination of about
73 deg. be obtained; when it appears any further
advance in that direction is attended with a loss
of power. With these facts in view, the impinging
surface of the Archimedean Screw, in the model under
consideration, has been so disposed as to form, at
its outer circumference, an angle of 68 deg.
with the axis of revolution, gradually diminishing
as it approaches the centre, according to the essential
character of such a form of structure.
The novelty of the application of
this instrument to the propulsion both of ships and
balloons, suggests the propriety of a few more explanatory
remarks to elucidate its nature and meet certain objections
which those who are ignorant of its peculiar qualities
are apt to raise in respect of it.
Previous to the adoption of this particular
instrument, various analogous contrivances had been
resorted to in order to produce the same effects.
Of these, examples are afforded in the sails of the
windmill, the vane of the smoke jack, and of more modern
introduction, the propellers designed by Mr.
Taylor for the equipment of steam-boats, and which
Mr. Green has availed himself of to shew the effect
of atmospheric re-action in directing the course of
the balloon. Now all these and similar expedients
are merely modifications of the same principle, more
or less perfect as they more or less resemble the
perfect screw, but all falling far short of the efficacy
of that instrument in its primitive character and construction.
The reason of this deficiency can be readily accounted
for. All the modifications alluded to, which
have hitherto been applied to the purposes of locomotion,
are adaptations of plane surfaces. Now
it is the character of plane surfaces to present
the same angle, and consequently to impinge upon the
air with the same condition of obliquity throughout.
But the rate of revolution, and consequently
of impact, varies according to the distance from the
axis; being greatest at the outer edge, and gradually
diminishing as it approaches the centre of rotation,
where it may be supposed to be altogether evanescent.
Now it is by the re-action of the air against one
side of the impinging plane, that the progressive motion
is determined in the opposite direction, which re-action
is proportioned to the rate of impact, the
angle remaining the same. If then we suppose
a re-action corresponding to the greatest rate
of revolution, which is that due to the outermost
portion of the impinging surface (that most removed
from the axis of rotation) we shall have a progressive
motion in the whole apparatus greater than the rate
of impact of the innermost or more central
portions of the revolving plane; and accordingly the
re-action will be thereabouts transferred from the
back to the front of the propulsive apparatus, and
tend to retard instead of advancing the progress of
the machine to which it is attached. This inconvenience
is felt and acknowledged by all those who have employed
this principle to obtain a progressive motion, and
accordingly a provision has been made against it in
the removal or reduction of the central
portion of the revolving vanes, with a view to let
the air escape or pass through as the instrument advances;
a provision which is certainly effectual to that end,
but at the cost of the surface, which is the
ultimate source of the required re-action. All
this is avoided in the use of the perfect screw.
There, the rate of rotation and the angle of impact
mutually corresponding, may be said to play into each
other’s hands; the spiral becoming more extended
as the impact becomes less forcible, that is as it
approaches the centre, where both altogether vanish
or disappear; thus obviating the possibility of any
interruption to the course of the machine from the
contrarious impact of the air, however quick or however
slow the motions, either of the screw itself or of
the machine which is propelled by its operation.
In attestation of this fact and as showing the immunity
of the perfect screw from the disparaging effects
experienced by the other modes of accomplishing the
same object, I will only mention a circumstance related
to me by Mr. Smith himself, to whom I am glad to acknowledge
myself indebted for so much valuable information respecting
this instrument, which, by the light he has thrown
upon its use and the improvements he has introduced
into its construction, he may be truly said to have
made his own. Upon a late occasion, when trying
one of the larger class of vessels which had just
been furnished by him upon this principle, some persons
not perceiving the true nature of the figure employed,
contended that some opposition must be experienced
by the central portion of the screw, which revolved
so much less rapidly than the rate of the ship itself.
In order to convince them of their error, Mr. Smith
caused a portion of the surface in question, next the
axis, to a certain distance, to be cut away, leaving
an opening, by which, for the water to escape.
The result was, immediately the loss of one mile an
hour in the rate of the ship; thus shewing that even
the most apparently feeble portion of the impinging
surface of this instrument contributes, in its degree,
to the constitution of the aggregate force of which
it is productive.
This peculiarity of construction is
the main cause of the advantage which the Archimedean
Screw possesses over all its types or imitations;
but it is not the only one. The entirety
or unbroken continuity of its surface is another,
not much less influential. The value of this
will be the more readily appreciated when we consider
that air, unlike water and other non-elastic fluids,
undergoes a rarefaction or impoverishment of density,
and consequently of resisting power, accordingly as
it is swept away by the rapid passage of impinging
planes; the parts immediately behind, and to
a considerable distance, being thereby relieved from
the support they had previously experienced, and extending
(and consequently becoming thinner) in order to fill
up the space thus partially cleared away. Now
it is evident that if other planes be brought into
operation in the parts of the atmosphere thus impoverished,
before they have had time to recover their pristine
or natural density, they will of necessity act with
diminished vigour; the resistance being ever proportioned
to the density of the resisting medium. This is
the condition into which, more or less, all systems
of revolving planes are necessarily brought, that
consist of more than one; and is a grand cause of
the little real effect they have been made capable
of producing, whenever tried. The nature of this
objection, and the extent to which it operates, will
appear most strikingly from the following fact.
Mr. Henson’s scheme of flight is founded upon
the principle of an inclined plane, started from an
eminence by an extrinsic force, applied and continued
by the revolution of impinging vanes, in form and
number resembling the sails of a windmill. In
the experiments which were made in this gallery with
several models of this proposed construction, it was
found that so far from aiding the machine in
its flight, the operation of these vanes actually
impeded its progress; inasmuch as it was always
found to proceed to a greater distance by the mere
force of acquired velocity (which is the only force
it ever displayed), than when the vanes were set in
motion to aid it a simple fact, which it
is unnecessary to dilate upon. It is to the agency
of this cause, namely, the broken continuity of surface,
that, I have no doubt, is also to be ascribed the
failure of the attempt of Sir George Cayley to propel
a Balloon of a somewhat similar shape to the present,
which he made at the Polytechnic Institution a short
while since, when he employed a series of revolving
vanes, four in number, disposed at proper intervals
around, but which were found ineffectual to move it.
Had these separate surfaces been thrown into one,
of the nature and form of the Archimedean Screw, there
is little doubt that the experiment would have been
attended with a different result. In accordance
with the principles here illustrated, the Archimedean
Screw properly consists of only one turn; more
than one being productive of no more resistance, and
consequently superfluous. A single unbroken turn
of the screw, however, when the diameter is of any
magnitude, would require a considerable length of axis,
which in its adaptation to the Balloon, would be practically
objectionable; accordingly two half turns,
nearly equivalent in power to one whole turn, has
been preferred; as in most instances it has been by
Mr. Smith, himself, in his application of it to the
navigation of the seas,
Indeed, in all other respects, except
the nature of its material, the screw here represented
is exactly analogous to that used by Mr. Smith in
its most perfect form, having been, in fact, designed,
and in part constructed under his own supervision.
The model upon which these principles
have been now, for the first time, successfully, at
least, tried in the air, is constructed upon the following
scale. The Balloon is, as before stated, an ellipsoid
or solid oval; in length, 13 feet 6 inches, and in
height, 6 feet 8 inches. It contains, accordingly,
a volume of gas equal to about 320 cubic feet, which,
in pure hydrogen, would enable it to support a weight
of twenty-one pounds, which is about its real power
when recently inflated, and before the gas has had
time to become deteriorated by the process of endosmose.
The whole weight of the machine and apparatus is seventeen
pounds; consequently there is about four pounds to
spare, in order to meet this contingency.
Beneath the centre of the Balloon,
and about two-thirds of its length, is a frame of
light wood, answering to the hoop of an ordinary Balloon;
to which are attached the cords of the net which encloses
the suspending vessel, and which serves to distribute
the pressure of the appended weight equally over its
whole surface, as well as to form an intermediate
means of attachment for the rest of the apparatus.
This consists of a car or basket in the centre; at
one end the rudder, and at the other the Archimedean
Screw. The car is about two feet long and eighteen
inches broad, and is laced to the hoop by cords, which
running through loops instead of being fastened individually,
allow of unlimited play, and equalize the application
of the weight of the car to the hoop, as of the whole
to the Balloon above. The Archimedean Screw consists
of an axis of hollow brass tube eighteen inches in
length, through which, upon a semi-spiral of 15 deg.
of inclination, are passed a series of radii or spokes
of steel wire, two feet long, (thus projecting a foot
on either side) and which being connected at their
outer extremities by two bands of flattened wire, form
the frame work of the Screw, which is completed by
a covering of oiled silk cut into gores, and tightly
stretched, so as to present as nearly uniform a surface
as the nature of the case will permit. This Screw
is supported at either end of the axis by pillars
of hollow brass tube descending from the hoop, in
the lower extremities of which are the holes in which
the pivots of the axis revolve. From the end of
the axis which is next the car, proceeds a shaft of
steel, which connects the Archimedean Screw with the
pinion of a piece of spring machinery seated in the
car; by the operation of which it is made to revolve,
and a progressive motion communicated to the whole
apparatus. This spring is of considerable power
compared with its dimensions, being capable of raising
about 45 pounds upon a barrel of four inches diameter
after the first turn, and gradually increasing as it
is wound up. It weighs altogether, eight pounds
six ounces.
The rudder is a light frame of cane
covered with silk, somewhat of the form of an elongated
battledoor, about three feet long, and one foot wide,
where it is largest. It might be made considerably
larger if required, being exceedingly light and yet
sufficiently strong for any force to which it could
be subjected. It weighs altogether only two ounces
and a half. This instrument possesses a double
character. Besides its proper purpose of guiding
the horizontal course of the Balloon, it is capable
of being applied in a novel manner to its elevation
or depression, when driven by the propulsive power
of the Screw. Being so contrived as to be capable
of being turned flat, and also directed upwards
or downwards as well as to the right or left, it enables
the aeronaut to transfer the resistance of the air,
which, in any inclined position, it must generate in
its passage, to any side upon which he may desire
to act, and thus give a determination to the course
of the Balloon in the opposite direction. This
will appear more clear as well as more certain when
we consider, that the aerial vessel being in a state
of perfect equipoise, as it ever must be when proceeding
on the same level, the slightest alteration in its
buoyancy is sufficient to send it to a considerable
distance either up or down as the case may be:
the rejection of a pound of ballast, or of an equivalent
amount of gas, being enough to conduct the aeronaut
to the extremest limits of his desires in either direction,
whatever may be the size of his Balloon. Now a
resistance equal to many pounds is attainable by an
inclined plane of even moderate dimensions when propelled
even with moderate velocity; and being readily governed
by the mere inclination of the impinging plane at
the will and by the hand of the aerial voyager, it
will be in his power to vary the level of his machine
with very considerable nicety; enabling him to approach
the surface of the earth, or in a gentle curve to
sweep away from its occasional irregularities, and
proceed to a very considerable elevation without interrupting
the progress of his course, and, what is of more importance,
without sacrificing any part of his resources in gas
or ballast, upon the preservation of which the duration
of his career so entirely depends. These properties
of the rudder it is not possible to display in the
present exhibition, owing to the confined nature of
the course which it is necessary to pursue; but they
were sufficiently tested in the preliminary experiments
at Willis’s Rooms, where the space being larger,
a circular motion was conferred upon the machine by
connecting it with a fixed centre round which it was
thus made to revolve, without the necessity of confining
it to the one level.
The rate of motion which the Balloon
thus equipped is capable of accomplishing varies according
to the circumstances of its propulsion. When
the Archimedean Screw precedes, the velocity is less
than when it is made to follow, owing to the reaction
of the air in the former instance against the car,
the under surface of the balloon, and other obstacles,
by which its progress is retarded. Again, when
the cord upon which it travels is most tense and free
from vibration, the rate is found to be considerably
accelerated, compared with what it is when the contrary
conditions prevail. But chiefly is its speed affected
by the proper ballasting of the machine itself,
upon which, depends the friction it encounters from
the cord on which it travels. Under ordinary
circumstances it proceeds at a rate of about four miles
an hour, but when the conditions alluded to have been
most favourable, it has accomplished a velocity of
not less than five; and there is no doubt that were
it altogether free from restraint, as it would be in
the open air, with a hand to guide it, its progress
would be upwards of six miles an hour.
Having now, I trust, sufficiently
explained the principles exemplified in the model
here described, it may be expected that I should add
a few words regarding their reduction into practice
upon a larger scale and in the open air, with such
difficulties to contend with as may be expected to
be encountered in the prosecution of such a design.
In the first place, however, it will be necessary
to disabuse the public mind of some very prevailing
misconceptions with respect to the conditions of a
Balloon exposed to the action of the winds, pursuing
its course under the exercise of an inherent propulsive
power. These misconceptions, which, be it observed,
are more or less equally participated in by the scientific
as by the ignorant, when devoid of that practical
experience which is the basis of all aeronautical
proficiency, are of a very vague and general character,
and consequently not very easy accurately to define.
In order, therefore, to make sure of meeting all the
objections and removing all the doubts to which they
are calculated to give rise, it will be advisable,
even at the risk of a little tediousness, to separate
them into distinct questions and treat them accordingly.
One of the most specious of these
misconceptions regards the effects of the resistance
of the atmosphere upon the figure of the Balloon when
rapidly propelled through the air, whereby it is presumed
its opposing front will be driven in, and more or
less incapacitated from performing the part assigned
to it; namely, to cleave its way with the reduced
resistance due to its proper form. To obviate,
this imagined result, various remedies have been proposed such
as, to construct that part of the machine of more
solid materials than the rest, or else (as suggested
by one of the most scientific and ingenious of those
who have devoted their attention to the theory of aerial
navigation), to subject the gaseous contents of the
Balloon to such a degree of artificial condensation
by compression, as shall supply from within a force
equal to that from without; adopting, of course, materials
of a stronger texture than those at present in use,
for the construction of the balloon. Now the
contingency against which it is here sought to provide,
and which I grant is a very reasonable one to anticipate,
has nevertheless no real existence in practice; at
least in such a degree as to render it necessary to
have recourse to any particular expedient for its
prevention. Taking it for granted that the hypothesis
in which it is involved is founded upon a presumed
analogy with a Balloon exposed to the action of the
wind while in a state of attachment to the earth,
I would first observe that the cases in question,
however apparently analogous, are in reality essentially
dissimilar. In the one case (that where the Balloon
is supposed to be attached to the earth) all the motion,
and consequently all the momentum, is in the
air; in the other case (where the Balloon is supposed
to be progressive), it is in the constituent particles
of the machine itself and of its gaseous contents.
And this momentum, which is ever proportioned to the
rate of its motion, and, consequently, to the amount
of resistance it experiences, is amply sufficient
to secure the preservation of the form of its opposing
front, however partially distended, and whatever the
velocity with which it might happen to be endowed.
Independently, however, of this corrective principle,
another, equally efficacious is afforded in the buoyant
power of the included gas, which, occupying all the
upper part of the Balloon so long as it is in a condition
to sustain itself in the air, and generally extending
to its whole capacity, presses from within with a
force far greater than any it could experience from
the external impact of the atmosphere, and sufficiently
resists any impression from that quarter which might
tend to impair its form. To what extent this
is effective, will appear more clearly when we observe
that in any balloon inflated, it is the sides
of the distended globe that bear out the weight of
the appended cargo, through the intervention of the
network; a weight only limited by the sustaining power
of the machine itself, and in the case of the great
Vauxhall or Nassau Balloon, amounting to more than
two tons, and consequently pressing with a force far
exceeding any that could arise from the impact of
the air at any rate of motion it could ever be expected
to accomplish. And this statement, which represents
the theoretical view of the question, is fully borne
out by the real circumstances of the case as they
appear in practice. So far from justifying the
apprehensions of those who conceive that the front
of the Balloon would be disfigured by its compulsory
progression through the air, the result is exactly
the reverse; the only tendency to derangement of form
displaying itself in the part behind, where
the rushing in of the atmospheric medium to fill the
place of the advancing body (in the nature of an eddy,
as it is termed in water), might and no doubt would,
to some extent (though perhaps but slightly) affect
the figure of that part, in a manner, however, calculated
rather to aid than to impair the general design in
view,
Another error of more universal prevalency,
because of a more superficial character, regards the
condition of the Balloon as affected by the currents
of air, in and through which it might have to be propelled.
The arguments founded upon such a view of the case,
generally assume some such form as the following “It
is true you can accomplish such or such a rate of
motion; but that is only in a room, with a calm atmosphere,
or with a favourable current of wind. In the
open air, with the wind at the rate of twenty or thirty
miles an hour, your feeble power would be of no avail.
You could never expect to direct your course against
the wind, and if you were to attempt it and the wind
were strong, you would inevitably be blown to pieces
by the force of the current.” Now this argument
is equally nought with the preceding. The condition
of the Balloon, as far as regards the exercise of
its propulsive powers, is precisely the same whether
the wind be strong or gentle, with it or against it.
In neither case would the Balloon experience any opposition
or resistance to its progress but what itself,
by its own independent motion, created; and
that opposition or resistance would be exactly the
same in whatever direction it might be sought to be
established. The Balloon, passively suspended
in the air, without the exercise of a propulsive power,
experiences no effects whatever from the motion of
the atmosphere in which it is carried, however violent;
and the establishment of such a propulsive power could
never subject it to more than the force itself, with
which it was invested. The way which the
Balloon so provided would make through the air would
always be the same, in whatever direction, or with
whatever violence the wind might happen to blow; and
the condition of the Balloon would always be the same
that was due to its own independent rate of
motion, without regard to any other circumstances
whatever. If it was furnished with the means
of accomplishing a rate of motion equal to ten miles
an hour, it would experience a certain amount of atmospheric
resistance due to that rate; and this amount of resistance
with all its concomitant consequences, neither more
nor less, would it experience, whether it endeavoured
to make this way against a wind blowing at
the rate of 100 miles an hour, or with the same
in its favour. The result, so far as regards its
distance from the place of starting, would, I grant,
be very different; but at present we are only considering
the conditions of its motion through the air,
and these, I repeat, would be the same whatever the
rate or course of the wind; so that all speculations
on this score must resolve themselves into questions
of quantity, not of quality, in the
effect sought to be accomplished: in other words,
all consideration of the rate of the wind must be left
out of the argument, except, in so far as it shall
be taken to regulate the limit which shall be assigned
to the rate of the aerial machine, as sufficient to
justify its claims to the title of a successful mode
of navigating the skies.
With these conditions established,
it will now be seen that we have nothing to consider,
in discussing the probable success of any scheme of
aerial navigation with the aid of the Balloon (so far
as its mere movements are concerned) except the
actual rate of motion which it is competent
to accomplish; whether or not it be sufficient to
meet the exigencies of the case as they may happen
to be estimated. That its capabilities in that
respect, be displayed within a room, or in a calm
atmosphere, or under what may be called the most favourable
circumstances, has nothing in it to disparage or affect
the general question. Whatever it can do there,
it can do the same in a hurricane; and the only real
question is, “whether, what it can accomplish
in respect of rate, is enough to answer the purpose
in view.”
The model we have been just describing
is capable as we have seen, of accomplishing a rate
of about six miles an hour. Now the resistance
to the progress of a Balloon varies as the squares
of the velocities or rates of motion. Accordingly,
for the same Balloon to accomplish twice the speed,
or twelve miles an hour, it would be necessary to be
provided with four times the power. Thus as the
spring power employed in the model is equal to a weight
of 45 pounds, upon a barrel of four inches in diameter,
it would require one competent to raise 180 pounds
on the same sized barrel, to enable it to propel the
same Balloon at double the present rate.
But with regard to Balloons of different
sizes and of the same shape, the power required to
produce the same rate of motion, would be as the squares
of their respective diameters: for the power is
as the resistance, the resistance as the surface,
and the surface follows the proportion just assigned.
In order, therefore to propel a Balloon of the same
form and twice the diameter, at the same rate, it would
require a force of four times the amount.
Now to apply this to the consideration
of a Balloon of superior magnitude, let us assume
one of 100 feet in length, and fifty feet in height.
The buoyant power of such a machine, or the weight
it would carry, supposing it inflated with gas of
the same specific gravity, compared with that of the
model, would be as the cubes of their respective diameters;
or in, about, the ratio of 420 to one. Such a
Balloon, therefore, so inflated, would carry a weight
of about 8700 pounds, or above three tons and three
quarters. As, however, it would be very expensive
to inflate such a vessel with pure hydrogen gas, it
would be advisable to found our calculations upon the
use of coal gas; under which circumstances the weight
it would carry would be limited to about three tons.
Deducting from this, one ton for the weight of the
Balloon itself and its necessary equipments, there
would remain two tons, or about 4500 pounds, to be
devoted to the power, whatever it might be, by which
the machinery was to be moved, and the living cargo
it might have to carry. Nor let the reader be
surprised at the magnitude of the figures we are here
employing, as if it were something extraordinary or
beyond the power of man to accomplish. The dimensions
and power we have here assumed is very little greater
than those of the great Vauxhall Balloon, and considerably
less than some of Montgolfières, or Fire-balloons,
which were first employed.
Now the resistance which such a Balloon
as I have here described would experience in its passage
through the air, and consequently the power it would
require to establish that resistance compared with
those of the model, we have said would be as the squares
of their respective diameters, or in, about, the ratio
of only fifty-six to one; in other words, whatever
force it would take to propel the model at any given
rate, it would require just fifty-six times the power
to accomplish the same result with the large Balloon
we have been describing.
In order to ascertain precisely what
this power would be in any given instance, it only
remains to find an expression for the spring power
with which we have been hitherto dealing, that shall
be more generally comprehensible.
This we shall do by a comparison with
the power of steam, according to the usual mode of
estimating it; that is, reckoning a one-horse power
to be equal to the traction or draught of 32,000 lbs.
through the space of one foot in a minute. According
to this scale, observing the corresponding conditions
of the spring namely, the weight it balances
on the barrel, (answering to the force of traction)
= 45 lbs., the circumference of the barrel (answering
to the space traversed) = one foot, and the time of
uncoiling for each turn, (answering to the rate of
the operation) say, three seconds and a half we
find the power of the spring employed in the propulsion
of the model, to be as nearly as possible the forty-second
part of the power of one horse; from whence it is
easy to deduce the conditions of flight assignable
to the same, and to different sized Balloons of the
same shape, at any other degree of speed. Assuming,
for instance, a Balloon of 100 feet in length and
50 feet in height, and proposing a rate of motion equal
to 20 miles an hour, we have, in the first instance,
the power required to propel the model at that rate,
compared with that already ascertained for a velocity
of six miles an hour, in the ratio of the squares
of the two velocities, as nearly ten to one; that
is, ten forty-seconds, or about one-fourth of a horse
power. To apply this to the larger Balloon, we
must take the squares of their respective diameters;
which being nearly in the ratio of 56 to 1, gives
an amount of 56 times one-fourth or about 14 horses,
as the sum of the power required.
From what particular source the power
to be employed in the propulsion of the Balloon should
be deduced, is not indeed a question without some
difficulties and doubts in the determination.
To all the moving powers at present before the world
some objections apply which disparage their application,
or altogether exclude them from our consideration.
The power of the coiled spring is
too limited to be employed upon a larger scale.
The use of the steam-engine is accompanied with a
gradual consumption of the resources of the Balloon
in ballast, and consequently in gas, the one being
exactly answerable to the other, and is therefore
not calculated for voyages of long duration. Human
strength appears to be too feeble for great results,
and moreover, requires repose; which reduces the amount
assignable to each man to a fraction of its nominal
value. Of electro-magnetism as yet we know too
little to enable us to pronounce upon it with certainty.
Of the remaining powers known only one is worth mentioning
in connexion with this subject, namely, the elastic
force of air; and this I only mention because it has
been taken up by one whose authority in these matters
is deservedly entitled to much weight, and who entertains
great hopes of making it ultimately subservient to
the purpose in view.
But although none of these powers,
in their present state, be so perfectly adapted to
the propulsion of the Balloon as to leave nothing
further to desire, yet are some of them so far applicable
as, undoubtedly, to enable us to accomplish, by their
means, a very large amount of success. A steam
engine of the power required, namely, equal to fourteen
horses, could be easily constructed, far within the
limits of weight which we have at our disposal upon
that account in the Balloon under consideration, or
even in one much smaller; and recent improvements
have so far reduced the amount of coal required for
its maintenance, that perhaps as long a voyage could
be made by means of it now, as would be expected or
required. Even human strength, by a certain mode
of applying it, might be made effectual to the accomplishment
of a very sufficient rate of motion, say fourteen or
fifteen miles an hour, for, continuously, as long a
period as the natural strength of man, moderately
taxed, could endure, and which we may reckon at twelve
hours.
It is true that neither the velocity
here quoted, nor that before assumed is so great as
to enable the aeronaut to compete with some of the
modes of transit employed on the surface of the earth;
as, for instance, the railroads, where 25 miles an
hour is not an unusual speed. Yet is not the
aerial machine which could command such a rate of
motion to be despised, or set aside as inferior in
actual accomplishments to what is already at our disposal;
for it must not be lost sight of, that railroads,
or terrestrial roads of every description, must ever
be limited in their extent and direction, and travelling
on them, however perfectly contrived, subject to deviations
and interruptions, particularly in passing from one
country to another beyond the seas, which if taken
into account, would reduce the apparent estimate of
their rates, considerably under the lowest of those
assigned to the Balloon in the previous calculation;
and at all events, by sea, much less, under the most
favourable circumstances is the ordinary rate of ships.
But, it may be observed, we are here
counting upon a rate of motion as established, which
is only effectual to that extent in the absence of
contrary currents of wind. This is true; nevertheless
it is no bar to the use which might be made of the
aerial conveyance so furnished, nor any disparagement
to the advantages which might be drawn from it; for
not only does the aeronaut possess the means of choosing,
within certain limits, the currents to which he may
please to commit himself, and of which, abundance
of every variety is sure to be met with at some elevation
or other in the atmosphere, but, as in all general
arguments, where the conditions are equally applicable
to both sides of the question, they may be fairly
left out as neutralising each other, so, here it must
not be forgotten, that the currents in question, being
altogether indeterminate, and equally to be expected
from all quarters, an equal chance exists of advantages
to be derived, as of disadvantages to be encountered
from their occurrence; and that, even without the
means of making a selection, the admitted laws of
reasoning would justify us in considering the chances
of the latter to be fully counterbalanced by those
of the former. It is enough, for moderate success
at least, if, possessing the power of avoiding the
bad, and of availing himself of the good, the aeronaut
be furnished with the means of making a sufficient
progress for himself when the atmosphere is such as
neither to favour nor to obstruct him; and in this
condition I humbly conceive he would be placed, with
even a less rate of motion than that which we have
before assigned, and confidently reckon upon being
able to accomplish.