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                  Wright Experience team members work on the "canard" of their
                  1902 glider in Ken Hyde's workshop. The canard, from the
                  French word for "duck" because it resembles the shape of a
                  duck's neck, is the elevator mechanism located at the front of
                  the aircraft. The curved wooden hip cradle, used for steering
                  the glider, appears in the foreground.
                 
                
 
  
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                  The 1902 Wright Glider, first flown on October 8, 1902, at
                  Kitty Hawk and reconstructed here, was the first Wright flying
                  machine to look more like an aircraft than a kite, as all
                  their boxy earlier flying machines had. It was also the first
                  flying machine to perform the three functions all aircraft
                  perform today, from single-engine planes to spacecraft: roll,
                  pitch, and yaw.
                 
                
 
  
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                  Beverly Hyde, wife of Ken Hyde, attaches the fabric wing skin
                  to the outer wing panel of the 1911 Model B reconstruction
                  plane. The fabric seen here, like the Wrights' Model B fabric,
                  is rubberized and waterproof, which prevents the wings from
                  absorbing moisture and shrinking. In order to allow the
                  plane's wings to warp, or twist, while turning without ripping
                  their fabric covering apart, the wing skin is sewn together
                  along diagonal lines.
                 
                
 
  
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                  The Model B's fabric wings not only provided the surface area
                  for airflow to generate lift, they were also the centerpieces
                  of the Wrights' wing-warping system. Wing-warping took
                  advantage of the twisting motion of the flexible wings to make
                  turns. In this photograph, the Wright Model B reconstruction
                  plane has its wings completely warped for making a turn to the
                  left. That is, the wings on the plane's right side (from the
                  pilot's perspective) have warped two feet downward towards the
                  grass from their resting position, while the wings on the
                  plane's left side have warped upward.
                 
                
 
  
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                  Dave Meyer takes minute measurements of the reconstruction
                  1911 Wright Model B's distinctive "bent end" propeller, which
                  is made of spruce. The bent-end propeller was the Wrights'
                  standard propeller from 1905 until 1915. It has an efficiency
                  rate of 80 percent, meaning that it can convert 80 percent of
                  an aircraft's engine power into useful thrust. Even with all
                  the aviation innovations since the Wrights, today's propellers
                  have efficiency rates of about 85 percent, only a slight
                  improvement on the Wrights' remarkably advanced design.
                 
                
 
  
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                  Greg Cone labors over the Wright Experience's reproduction of
                  the 1903 Wright engine, the prototype for the roughly 200
                  engines the Wrights built in total. The four-cylinder engine
                  had no throttle and could only run at full speed. In the
                  foreground, an original four-cylinder 1912 Model B engine
                  stands by. This was the only engine the Wrights licensed for
                  production by other companies.
                 
                
 
  
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                  Here, the Wright Experience's 1903 Wright Flyer reproduction
                  stands inside the NASA Langley Full Scale Wind Tunnel in
                  Hampton, Virginia, where it underwent testing in order to
                  better understand its capabilities. Because most of the
                  Wrights' original aircraft were either destroyed or are in
                  fragile condition today, one of the best opportunities
                  aviation experts have to study Wright aircraft design is by
                  testing precise replicas like this one.
                 
                
 
  
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                  Greg Cone makes final adjustments to the 1911 Wright Model B
                  just before Ken Hyde takes the aircraft on its first taxi
                  tests on the grass airfield surrounding the hangar.
                 
                
 
  
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                  Ken Hyde takes the controls of the 1911 Model B, its
                  propellers whirring, as taxi tests begin. A taxi test lets a
                  pilot practice his techniques for taking directional control
                  of an aircraft on the ground.
                 
                
 
  
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                  The taxi test culminates unexpectedly in a rough treetop
                  landing when Ken Hyde accidentally takes off while trying to
                  avoid a ditch while taxiing. After flying in circles for ten
                  minutes and trying in vain to put the aircraft down safely,
                  Hyde was forced to end the flight 30 feet above ground. Though
                  the Model B was severely damaged (and Hyde sustained a broken
                  wrist), the Wright Experience team, noting that the Wrights
                  themselves endured their fair share of crashes, remains
                  determined to repair the Model B and fly another day.
                 
                
 
  
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