A Starting Device - Huffman Prairie Flying Field, Ohio
Posted by: DougK
N 39° 48.254 W 084° 03.658
16S E 751610 N 4410162
A replica of the catapult used to launch the Wright flying machine is built on location at the Huffman Prairie Flying Field near Dayton, Ohio.
Waymark Code: WMFJ2Z
Location: Ohio, United States
Date Posted: 10/24/2012
Views: 11
The Wright brothers built and designed a catapult launching system to help with the light winds
at
Huffman Prairie Flying Field, near Dayton, Ohio. This sign tells the story of the nearby catapult.
To take off by engine power alone in Dayton's light winds, the Wright brothers had to lay out as much as 240 feet of wooden rails. If the breeze shifted, the track had to be moved and pegged down again to face the new wind direction.
But after they built a catapult in September 1904, the Wrights could launch their flyer with only 60 feet of rail.
It is evident that we will have to build a starting device that will render us independent of wind and are now designing one…
Wilbur Wright, August 8, 1904
Catapult-assisted takeoffs
A team of horses pulled a 1600-pound counterweight to the top of the wooden derrick. When the weight fell sixteen feet, it added enough speed to get a flying machine airborne - regardless of wind direction and strength.
The catapult in front of you is a replica.
This is one of many interpretative signs on the flying field, telling the story of early flight.