As a 15-year-old I tried to build a glider for myself, after falling in love with Lilienthal’s design. I built it using an old shop awning lashed to a crude wooden frame, then tested it by running down the hill behind our cottage in Peasmarsh (Paul and Linda McCartney lived at the top of that hill, in fact). The thing actually took off! I had a split second to decide whether to keep going up point the nose down and crash. I opted to crash. Broke my ankle and was off school for two weeks. But I probably saved my life.
I was fifteen when I jumped off a high wall with a wing-like contraption made of bamboo poles and old sheets. I landed with a tangled thump on soft dirt. Luckily, nothing broke except the wing. Thereafter I ventured a powered gyroplane somewhat like the ones that submarines towed in WW2, with welded steel tubes and an old motorcycle engine. Luckily, it lurched to one side and shook itself to death on the very first attempt to move. Some kind of alarm must have entered my obtuse teenage brain, because I never tried anything bigger than models afterwards
Bought several aluminum pipes with months of saved school lunch money to build my own glider but then my dad used 'em all up to fix the house windows. Fast forward, waay forward, last month in fact, I decided to jump off a ledge in an attempt to float down with the biggest umbrella I've ever bought. The thing collapsed into an inverted dart tumbling me into the asphalt road - luckily no broken bones, just crying in pain. My daughter who was filming was cracking up unstoppably. Congrats man, you went ahead and actually did it. You might not want to try again, but as for me, I haven't used up my turn yet, so... wish me luck for my next, real big try!
Yes, but the Wrights ended up re-doing all of Lilienthal's tables and concepts of lift in order to achieve actual powered, controlled, and continuous flight. Lilienthal's "flights" were mere semi-controlled descents down a hill. Weight-shift is not truly a proper means of control and is what inevitably what killed him. Wrights were "First In Flight". Sorry.
@@michaelladigo2395 The Wrights achieved mechanical directional control first, but Lilienthal was the first to fly in a controlled manner: A weight shift hang glider is FLYING. Hundreds of powered weight shift airplanes fly everyday. The Wright Brothers conclusions on airfoil design were incorrect because their wind tunnel was using airfoils that were too short and the air was moving too slowly. The Reynolds number (chord, speed, density, viscosity ) was way off and the Wrights airfoil was far from the correct shape for the speed they were going and the chord length of the wing. Their incorrect airfoils were detrimentally used by the US up threw WW1. The correctly shaped 2 surface wings of Fokker and German wind tunnel data finally proved how wrong the Wrights were.
What a great project and kudos to all involved in building, testing, and flying this glider!! I started hang gliding in 1974 and that is when I learned about Otto Lilienthal. So great to see you build and fly the original glider and do all the testing. He was so far ahead of his time!!
Thank you to all involved for sharing this achievement. To witness the dedication and to see this piece of history recreated in such detail is fascinating and amazing.
Thank you for this important reseach in aviation history. Otto was even the first hang glider pilot, flying 83 years before me. We were very aware of Otto as our historical reference at that time 1974. Bill Moyes and Bill Bennett was the new pioneers in hang gliding 1969. Flying with weight shifting as the only control have it's risks, because if you enter a strong downwind you lose your weight and subsequently ability to steer. I guess that was what ended Otto's life, as it almost did with my, more than once.
You would have thought they would have used an experienced hang glider pilot to test fly it, after all it is obviously a weight shift controlled glider. Personally I would have stiffened up the tail somehow to make it safer for outdoor flying. Going from the drawings alone we can't really know how stiff Lilienthal's original structure was.
He was the first to understand the flight. No one before was able to observ like him and use an engineer mind for such a final outcome. Years a go I went in touch the Otto museum and requested some of his original books. It was amazing from an engineer point of view to see what he did and how he studied the problem of flight . Clearly history has not given him his deserved place. I recommend every one to read his books to understand the mind of passionated person.
Sir George Cayley recognised by NASA as the Father of Floght , laid down the principles of aeronautics still used today and known for the first manned flight at Brompton Hall in Yorkshire , England .
@@danvision5086 You are dreaming. The man you’re talking about, was born 24 years later than Lilienthal. Lilienthal published his first book about aerodynamics in 1889. He began to fly in 1891. At Best, your man is the second one.
@@bertrandviolette9008 *I know, but the story is a bit more complicated. Special documents from China, via Marco Polo, Venice, etc. ( Da Vinci has got all the documents from the Dodge, Venice, etc. etc.. I am tired about fakes...*
@@danvision5086 We are talking about the first scientific approach of flight, here, and Lilienthal is the first in that. History of aviation is ok to recognize that. When i was studying aerodynamics, in France, the graphics about lift and drag (polaire de portance et traînée) were also called Lilienthal’s polaires), and not chinese, da Vinci, or Traian Vuia, or what else. Bleriot, Santos Dumont, Voisin, for example, first flew before Traian Vuia, but they can’t be describe as pioner of the scientific approach of aviation, and even less about aerodynamics. Even if Bleriot had a scientific approach of his designs.
Many thanks. Absolutely fascinating to watch. Lilienthal was truly the father of hang-gliding. I know that people are saying the ancient Chinese invented flight, but we do not have sufficient information about their machines. I should be patriotic and say that George Cayley in the UK created a primitive glider in the early 1850s. Later in the 1890s, another Englishman Percy Pilcher visited Lilienthal several times and was inspired by him, flying similar machines. Pilcher died back home after an in-flight structural failure in 1899. My thoughts as an ex-weight shift pilot: The tailplane should have been more controllable. I believe the high relative angle of incidence between the wing and the tailplane/stabiliser would keep the aircraft stable only within a narrow speed range. It was stable as set up, but diving/gaining speed would produce a rapid automatic nose-up correction that would keep the pilot very busy! It would have been a 'phugoid flyer' if flown long distance, I believe. That is not to dismiss any of the pioneering work that Lilienthal made, however - an amazing, talented person who gave his life for scientific progress.
@@travelbugse2829 You also forgot to mention Cayley's glider did fly and it is well documented as such. Several reconstructions of Cayley's machine have also been successfully flown. There seem to be some German propogandists around these days that are promoting Lilienthal to be the first in flight and the 'father of flight', they are totally wrong, and the honour rightfully belongs to Cayley.
Over fifty years ago I made a glider from old charts....I was on a ship in the south Atlantic...It wasn't particular scientific although I did understand the principal of having a curved wing, for lift. The main spar was tightly rolled and glued paper with the wing shape formed over it, it was about 1.5 metre wing span, The fuselage was formed in a similar fashion to the wing spar. The tail was formed in a similar fashion. I had to guess, educated guess, at the centre of gravity....When all was finished I sneaked it to the bridge whilst on watch with the Mate. It was a relatively calm, but a heavy rolling swell running. We stood on the wing of the bridge..... and launched my creation into a fifteen knot head wind created by the ship. The glider soared upwards then rolled towards the waves then to our surprise it skimmed the water like an Albatros. Its total flight time was between 10-15 seconds before it alight on the water ...and was gone...Watching this video of a pioneer of flight returned me to that day so long ago...
This is a great film! I started hang gliding in ‘78 and, of course, read about Otto. Watching the first flight in the wind tunnel and then on the winch, brought back so much. The short flight off the sand dunes reminds me of my first hops off a hill above Merthyr. Not much to beat this form of flying.
Hi Martin , a great film indeed , it brought back those exiting memories just before take off and impending flight on many of the site that the SE. Wales club flew . Cheers !!
I brought the plans for this glider to Home Depot. I went to the pvc/plumbing, plastic sheeting section, and the rope department and asked for help, their staff looked at the plans in each area, then me, and walked away. I was blocked from access to the duct tape isle and they confiscated my Home Depot charge card, mumbling something about liability and insurance risks and someone even mentioned needing mental evaluations... Thank you Otto, won't be making that mistake any more, next time will shop at Walmart, you should have warned us!
as a home depot employee and a fan of aviation history I would have been fascinated and i would love to help you find parts, but ive met people in the store who are doing dangerous things, and there are things we cant help with. if i thought somebody didnt have the technical understanding to tackle this, i would probably recommend the to build a kite version to understand, as i believe the wright brothers did
@@casychapin4647 I would want to go to your store and be the person I talk to along assembling the supplies and tools I need for the project. I would also grab some random, cheap tool on the way out. Upon check out, I would be certain to require a check out person help me upon and casually tell them what I am building, and that you were the person to help me gather the tools and supplies. That I was only there to purchase, x tool only, that last one I grabbed on the way out, and imply these extra purchases for what I am making was your idea..... lol. I was joking on my original response, still, on a serious note, I do in fact buy things for remote control aircraft builds and the foam that's normally being used for insulation is one of my go-to materials on many of my builds, so I do mention to them if I need their help, what the stock is for, and it's always cool seeing a smile on their faces knowing it's going for something cool, not merely stuck inside of some wall.
"Was it a fault in the material or was it a constructional defect?" I believe the idea that the storks don't flap their wings does not mean that their wings are rigid/fixed. Even in the video of the flying stork, a close observation reveals the wings are flexing, bending, turning, twisting. While it's subtle from a distance away, the wings are far from just randomly flexing from wind/loads. Hence, the major flaw in the assumption that it can be duplicated with a flexible model. None -the-less, He deserves the recognition and all the world-wide credit for his historical achievement!!
Oh, I love this. The brilliance and courage of Otto. A flying machine that the inventor was probably the only person who COULD fly it. I have to say that he died DOING his dream and inspiration. Flying.
Has no one ever heard of Sir John Cayley and his 'man flyer'? Otto did some sterling work but he was NOT the first to experience heavier than air manned flight. Cayley's 'man flyer' flew in 1853 across Brompton Dale in Yorkshire. Wickepedia has a good description of his life and times. Much of his empirical research established the principles and the theory of aerofoils and is reputed to have been used by the Wright Brothers. There is a full size working replica of his man flyer to be seen in the Yorkshire Air Museum. It was used in a film and flown by Derek Piggot. But full kudos to the professor and his team.
I too had a fascination for flight from an early age. By 1976 Hang - gliding had arrived in Britain and at 30 years of age this was my introduction to real natural un-powered flight from the beautiful coastal resort of Rhossily on the Gower coast of Wales . After my first two seater flight on a seated Highway glider with an instructor. After a top to bottom flight from 600ft I was HOOKED! My last flight was on a second hand Highway Demon glider from Merthyr Common in 1989 , my longest flight being 3Hrs. Later at the tender age of 6o I was able to obtain a NPPL licence flying a Cessna 150 , but regard my time on Hang-gliders the most exiting and natural way to fly . Hi! to Martin Hann by the way, what great days the were in the SE Wales Hang -Gliding Club.
Gracias a todos los que produjeron este maravilloso documento y la recreación de una obra maestra de vuelo de Otto. Siempre me llamó la atención su diseño. Creo que no tiene su justo reconocimiento en la historia de la aviación, así que este video lo acerca a su correcto lugar en la historia, lo veré más de una vez.
This is really awesome..😊 The way they took their time to build it from the beginning to the end is quite amazing.... good job guys..🤝 I remember building a human artificial wing in 2008 and it was successful...but the saddest part is that people keep doubting it because I'm from west Africa..🤦🏽 Although any moment from now I will shock my doubters by resurrecting that invention..🤝
Another similar pioneer was Gustav Whitehead. He was an early engine builder for the time. He went further by adding his engine to a Lilienthal style glider. Reports are that he flew it often, before the wright brothers, but wasnt documented properly. Credit should be given to early pioneers who had success. The Wright Brothers invented aeronautics but they werent first to fly.
I was a high school kid in the late 60s. I built several hangliders, that skimmed the ground . We were considered wierdos and disrespected. Fortunately I saw the danger and quit before they killed me. During that time there were many deaths to young experimenters. . Today there are standards that hangliders must meet to be safe. Our progress has been made on the shoulders of those who came and died before us, like Otto. If you look at those picture of him way back then, he was muscular looking, strong and intelligent. Like someone i might have known when i was his age. Honor history, salute to Otto Lilienthal.
Dumont was the summit .made the first fully controlled with all steps of flying and won the paris international prize with witness and never asked any patent and never wanted to profit from it. wright were grifters
¡Felicitaciones a todo el equipo! Por recrear éstos: 7 segundos para la eternidad. Con el espíritu sobre la genialidad de Don Otto Lilienthal Reciban mis saludos.
Very nice. I studied Otto Liliethal at school 50 years ago and very much wanted to build and fly my own glider, but didn't. He built an artificial hill 15 m (50 feet) high as he lived in a flat area with no suitable hills to launch from and I often admired the amount of work that would have taken.
Wonderful recreation of the Lillienthal glider. I did notice that there is instability of the tail relative to the wing. I don’t know if that was taken into account by Otto. I wonder if modifying his design to stabilize the relative movement of the tail would help or hinder the flight characteristics?
You ain't kidding brother, that thing was flapping around like it was made with toothpicks and rubber bands. Definitely could stand some reinforcement.
it would definitely help increase the flight time by been able to pitch the nose up and down with the stabilizer but back then probably didn't have and accurate idea of what a bird's tail is really supposed to do, whe you look at a bird flying, tail looks fixed in one position only, when.
In order to reduce the total weight of the aircraft, all bamboo rounded by rope will make it durable and is to be used instead of wooden rod in modification. A vertical enclosed bamboo loop is also to be installed and tied in the front part of the aircraft as the support for airman's feet and used as a step for his up and down jumping movement and such movement is similar to add energy to the wings during flying. No energy to be transferred to wings movement won't fly longer. Moreover, an additional of two parachutes to be installed at the left and right wings which would be opened after flying to increase uplift forces when required. I think that it will fly longer and land safely after modification.
That was the greatest invention, indeed! Great respect for him, moreover note that people new nothing about aerodynamics... Later the famous Soviet aircraft engineer Andrey Tupolev said that "give me a great engine and I'll make a brick fly"
People knew about birds, so knew about aerodynamics. They just didn't know much. For example the birds wing is curved and the tail is used to steer like a rudder on a boat.
@@tedmoss well, people new birds for millions of years. But how few it turned out when it came time to construct a air plane wing! First, the profile of it... Aha, now starts the new unpaved road
This project was carried out with typical German precision, and they clearly got to understand how the Lilienthal flying machine worked. But as a Hang Glider pilot from the very beggining , I know that trying to judge the flying characteristics of a glider like this on FLAT earth will not work very well. This type of flying machine needs the air to have a componant of rising up to meet the machine, as one has when flying it from a hill top. In their wind tunnel, the air was coming AT them, not UP to them and this is very important. When you stand on the top of a hill, you can feel the air coming up under you and all you need to do is take a couple of steps and the glider lifts up. Then you move you weight forwards, and the machine lowers its nose and moves forward, but because of the rising air the machine, also rises. This is exactly why the Lilienthal glider flew so successfully and is also the exact same way that modern day Hang Gliders fly. Otto was in essence the very first Hang Glider Pilot in the world!!
Great to see. I* was a Lilienthal enthusiast 40 years ago. 3.00 'in those days of course the strucure of the cloth was created without a punchcard'. I wouldn't be so sure, thats a Jaquard loom, they'd been around for 100 years by then - the first truly programmable machine, as all computer history nerds know.
Whoever flew before Otto forgot to tell the others how it works. After Otto’s flight demonstrations, people started flying all over the world. History books are full of stories about men who flew earlier, but even if they were all true, no one changed the course of history.
Building Lilienthal's glider from his own design using original as could be gathered and made materials was a fascinating and historical project. I wonder who of these scientists, aeronautical engineers and builders ever read or saw anything of the Wills brothers in southern California. The Wills brothers knew of Lilienthal and his glider, and built their own gliders from scratch and would up flying for miles and staying airborne for hours. They basically reinvented the hang glider and built up a successful, for a time, hang glider company. I bought a hang glider in 1974 and taking off into the air is a remarkable experience, one Otto did for the first time back in 1891. His insight into flight by watching storks fly overhead and studying a bird's wings is a seminal part of the history of flight.
the proof is absolutely provided by these people! respect! now having seen this you would like to shout more more, but on the other hand, you shouldn't take any unnecessary risks! Friendly greetings from The Netherlands! Rob👍
Congratulations on this amazing success. It took a lot of dedication and perseverance that I'm sure mimicked Lilienthal all the way down to the last bead of sweat heartbeat from an adrenaline filled flight. Proof positive his place in history is well deserved and eternally secure. Anything could have caused his crash, a gust of wind, fatigue or even a moment of broken concentration.
A very interesting book on the subject is by David Gierke, "To Caress the Air". It is based on the civil case of A.Herring vs. Glenn Curtis and in it you will find the involvement of A Herring and powered flight.
Learned to fly hang gliders in 1974 and later taught lessons near Sand City. A place called Marina Beach. I always revered Otto Lilienthal as the first hang glider pilot.
Marina Beach State Park north of Sand City was indeed the place where I flew the normal soaring apparatus replica as well as the Large Bi-Plane and Otto”s Experimental Pono plane together with Andy Beem (Windsports, LA) and George Reeves.
Undoubtedly Lilienthal was a keen observer of bird's wings and he put his observations to work in developing one of the World's First Gliders. Very nice recreation of the original.
That's where you're wrong, in Imperial Britain, a man by the name of Sir George Cayley made a glider with the keen importance parts of aircraft, lift, thrust, gravity, and drag in mind, the design has the wing and tail section suspended with solid material and the little carriage on the bottom of the plane, the source I got this information from is AmazingViz's First in Aviation 3D, which shows two planes before the Wright Flyer, the glider I just mentioned and also another areoplane powered by three engines with three propellers, in 1888 made in France and is now displayed in a museum in Paris, 35 years after the 1853 British glider, which makes it the real World's First Glider, before Otto Lilienthal.
It appears from the wind tunnel tests that the pilot sits right at the center of pressure, or even behind, rendering it unstable unless he pulls his weight forward slightly, moving his weight, and the center of gravity, slightly ahead of the center of pressure, making it stable and controllable. But what's with that flapping, loose empennage? Not only is airflow to it blocked by the wing, it seems very passive.
First in flight of any kind (hot air balloon): Jean Pilatre de Rozier First in unpowered heavier than air flight: Otto Lilienthal First in powered heavier than air flight: Orville Wright The Wright brothers flew unpowered heavier than air gliders successfully for years prior to their first successful powered flight. Blimps and Rigid Airships flew from 1852 to the present with a variety of accomplishments during that time. Filled the gap in the time between hot air balloons and the Wrights first powered flight.
what? no rolls or jumping from a skyscraper? pfpff joking! Remarkable journey and amazing success. congrats to everyone involved and the many hours of sweat, tears and joy
I agree Lidmark; but if you look at the title they say "first in flight" Also it appears by their video that really this glider was incapable of being launched without a head wind and may not have had enough lift even then to lift a normal size human into equiliibrium ; ie it would immediatley start to decend even going 50 kph. I think he understood the principles - thats true; and perhaps if he didn't die he would have built a real glider that actually flew without a head wind and might actually rise without having to go 50 Kph.
They were so careful on getting all of the details correct, but I was a little disappointed that he didn't wear lederhosen and high socks. Would have been so easy.
Your film makes it sound like Otto crashed on his first flight. Otto Lilienthal flew gliders about two thousand times over a period of five years before his fatal flight.
Good point. The pilot in the video is a big guy (though slim). I'm thinking that an actual hangglider pilot of shorter lighter stature would be a better match than a tall airplane pilot?
Since man had flown a hundred years early, and higher up to 30,000 ft and longer; I dare say there are aircraft that did not rely on Lilienthals insights. It was only 3 years later that the first Zeppline was built and flew several miles in 1900.
Otto Lilienthal was the pioneer on the science of flying due to the principle heavier than air. Flying due to the principles of lighter than air was an established technology by his time.
Yes ,but in 1894 Lawrence Hargraves flew his Box kite designs at Stanwell Tops, Sth of Sydney Australia. These designs which the Wright brothers, who had been in correspondence with were the designs they adopted. Credit due, but often Hargraves work is forgotten.
Обалдеть сколько людей которые пробовали сделать попытки с планером. Я ничего подобного не делал. В детстве только с одной ужасной горы скатился на двух колесах. И когда был подростковом возрасте сделал большой коробчатый китайский змей. Размах был почти под метр. Он очень хорошо поднимался в воздух. Я побежал его запускать. В определенный момент поток воздуха исчез, и он с большим ускорением полетел к земле. Вся конструкция разлетелась. Было жалко... Основная проблема планера это нестабильные потоки воздуха. Да они есть, но они возникают и исчезают.
While this is yet another step towards flight, it ignores the earlier contributions of George Caley the "Father of Flight" whose coachman was the pilot for his heavier than air gliders in successfully flying in 1853. So yes Otto was the first inventor to test his own devices, but history had already been made!
Sir George Caley in Yorkshire England flew his first model Glider in 1804 and a successful flight was made in a manned Glider with his footman as Pilot in 1853. This was the first Glider flight useing the understanding the principles of Weight,Thrust,Drag and Lift in the design which he discovered and recorded . The Wright Brothers used those principles in their design in the first powered flight,NASA accept Caley as the Father of Aviation as he was the first to understand the principles of flight.
A brilliant reconstruction but fails to acknowledge the work of George Cayley the true inventor of flight as long ago as 1799 and subsequently flew his first glider with pilot in 1804!
Sir George Cayley's reluctant coachman flew in 1853 predating Otto Lillienthal's outstanding success. Both Bill Frost of Wales in 1896 and Gustav Whitehead of USA in 1981 reportedly achieved powered flight, Frost's first flight achieved a distance of 500mtrs. Orville Wright went to a lot of trouble to discredit Whitehead in order to protect the Wright's historic claim, some consider that somewhat suspicious.
Viewing the few photos I've seen of Otto's flights, he was seated if you will, in a waist sling. The required excess strength, needed without a stable seat, would draw too much attention to aright the aircraft. A seated pilot, exercising the center of gravity by weight shift, would have a better chance of longer flight times.
What's the difference between this and the hang gliders of today? For one thing, the current designs are simpler and lighter in weight, with a much better glide ratio. Skilled pilots can take off using the strong and steady updraft over the top of sand dunes next to the sea and soar up very high. You can find videos online taken from onboard cameras showing them climbing up 4,000 meters or more. The all-time altitude record without power or oxygen is so high, they assumed the woman who set it would be dead upon landing, but she wasn't. The limiting factor is not just oxygen, but the cold temperature. The noteworthy aspect of Lilienthal's glider is that it was the first that is known.
I'm amazed at how many people don't grasp what Lilienthal did - so many here don't understand he was in control. Gliding is flying. When an eagle is soaring - is he not flying? Whoever said the wings need to be narrower and longer doesn't understand that such configuration would make it less controllable in a weight shifting glider. Was Lilienthal the first man to ride a glider? No. But Lilienthal rode a glider thousands of times, in public, and he inspired others - something that attempts before the 19th century didn't do.
George Cayley's coachman flew before then as well. That glider has also been reconstructed and flown. Box-kite gliders / kites flew as military spotting machines for quite a while. Santos-Dumont probably flew in South America, and another flight by one Percy Pilcher near where I live is unfortunately very badly documented, but his design has also been tested as a flying model, and while very draggy, flew. The history of early flight is complex, tainted by later Nationalism, and by very bad reporting by people who could not take the time to explain in any detail. Lillienthal has the benefit of a large number of photographs by many different witnesses, and he didn't build, fly and die in secrecy, like so many.
This is truly amazing but such strong words... There are different examples of this attempt before Otto. Leonardo Da Vinci who attempted to fly his example. He lived between 1452 -1519. Also an Ottoman (Today's Turkey) scientist called Hazerfan Ahmet Celebi (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hez%C3%A2rfen_Ahmed_%C3%87elebi) who lived between 1609-1640 flew his glider from European continent of Istanbul to Asian side of Istanbul approx. 3500 meters.
I think there was people who - like this guy - recreated Leonardo De Vinci airplane. No one knows if it was actually flown. His parachute was recreated and was shown to actually work.
I think the horizontal tail is angled too much. The original angle is much smaller. Why did you change the design? This causes the plane to lose stability.
As a 15-year-old I tried to build a glider for myself, after falling in love with Lilienthal’s design. I built it using an old shop awning lashed to a crude wooden frame, then tested it by running down the hill behind our cottage in Peasmarsh (Paul and Linda McCartney lived at the top of that hill, in fact).
The thing actually took off! I had a split second to decide whether to keep going up point the nose down and crash. I opted to crash. Broke my ankle and was off school for two weeks. But I probably saved my life.
Wow! How big was the hill? I wouldn't think that would be life or death...
Wow. Congrats on your build man. Will you build a better version?
Respected, sir! Was after your flight McCartney wrote his song "Distractions like butterflys are puzzling over my head"?
I was fifteen when I jumped off a high wall with a wing-like contraption made of bamboo poles and old sheets. I landed with a tangled thump on soft dirt. Luckily, nothing broke except the wing. Thereafter I ventured a powered gyroplane somewhat like the ones that submarines towed in WW2, with welded steel tubes and an old motorcycle engine. Luckily, it lurched to one side and shook itself to death on the very first attempt to move. Some kind of alarm must have entered my obtuse teenage brain, because I never tried anything bigger than models afterwards
Bought several aluminum pipes with months of saved school lunch money to build my own glider but then my dad used 'em all up to fix the house windows. Fast forward, waay forward, last month in fact, I decided to jump off a ledge in an attempt to float down with the biggest umbrella I've ever bought. The thing collapsed into an inverted dart tumbling me into the asphalt road - luckily no broken bones, just crying in pain. My daughter who was filming was cracking up unstoppably. Congrats man, you went ahead and actually did it. You might not want to try again, but as for me, I haven't used up my turn yet, so... wish me luck for my next, real big try!
Wilbur Wright was always respectful and appreciative of the great accomplishments of Otto Lilienthal. The video is a great tribute to a great man.
Yes, but the Wrights ended up re-doing all of Lilienthal's tables and concepts of lift in order to achieve actual powered, controlled, and continuous flight. Lilienthal's "flights" were mere semi-controlled descents down a hill. Weight-shift is not truly a proper means of control and is what inevitably what killed him. Wrights were "First In Flight". Sorry.
@@michaelladigo2395 Define FLIGHT.
@@michaelladigo2395 The Wrights achieved mechanical directional control first, but Lilienthal was the first to fly in a controlled manner: A weight shift hang glider is FLYING. Hundreds of powered weight shift airplanes fly everyday. The Wright Brothers conclusions on airfoil design were incorrect because their wind tunnel was using airfoils that were too short and the air was moving too slowly. The Reynolds number (chord, speed, density, viscosity ) was way off and the Wrights airfoil was far from the correct shape for the speed they were going and the chord length of the wing. Their incorrect airfoils were detrimentally used by the US up threw WW1. The correctly shaped 2 surface wings of Fokker and German wind tunnel data finally proved how wrong the Wrights were.
@@jonnyolson4387 nope, it was Santos Dumont who did it
@@agauerm Silence Brazilian. The Wright brothers were the first. Weight shifting is control, but no power = no flight.
What a great project and kudos to all involved in building, testing, and flying this glider!! I started hang gliding in 1974 and that is when I learned about Otto Lilienthal. So great to see you build and fly the original glider and do all the testing. He was so far ahead of his time!!
That is a dangerous machine.
@@tedmoss
=big mistace=NOT autostabil ("S"-shaped) airfoils !!!
@@tedmoss Technology doesn't advance without risk.
Bought a hang glider in '73 and we flew it off the dunes above Lake Michigan at Elberta. Four of us relayed in the sweaty haul back up the hill.
No one has said anything about Sir George Caley, many years before this German attempt !! In Yorkshire, United Kingdom.
Recognised by the Wrights and later NASA as the " Father of Flight " .
Thank you to all involved for sharing this achievement. To witness the dedication and to see this piece of history recreated in such detail is fascinating and amazing.
Thank you for this important reseach in aviation history. Otto was even the first hang glider pilot, flying 83 years before me. We were very aware of Otto as our historical reference at that time 1974. Bill Moyes and Bill Bennett was the new pioneers in hang gliding 1969. Flying with weight shifting as the only control have it's risks, because if you enter a strong downwind you lose your weight and subsequently ability to steer. I guess that was what ended Otto's life, as it almost did with my, more than once.
I thought it was a stall that killed him
@@connormclernon26 Why? He was an experienced pilot, engineer and inventor of aerodynamics. Stalling should have been known an practiced.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jan_Wn%C4%99k
=more in English...
@@atlet1 if headwind turned into downwind suddenly then the wing essentially stalled, and at low altitude very hard to recover.
@@vracan yes, that can happen too. I recognize, when I read my own comments, that I used the wrong word. Brobably fall wind would be a better word.
You would have thought they would have used an experienced hang glider pilot to test fly it, after all it is obviously a weight shift controlled glider. Personally I would have stiffened up the tail somehow to make it safer for outdoor flying. Going from the drawings alone we can't really know how stiff Lilienthal's original structure was.
He died in 1896. There was no glider expert, aviation was not invented yet.
Fantastic film giving credit to a great scientist & aviator and also the professor that showed so much courage in flying the reconstruction.
He was the first to understand the flight. No one before was able to observ like him and use an engineer mind for such a final outcome. Years a go I went in touch the Otto museum and requested some of his original books. It was amazing from an engineer point of view to see what he did and how he studied the problem of flight
. Clearly history has not given him his deserved place. I recommend every one to read his books to understand the mind of passionated person.
Sir George Cayley recognised by NASA as the Father of Floght , laid down the principles of aeronautics still used today and known for the first manned flight at Brompton Hall in Yorkshire , England .
Great project!
Lilienthal was the first real scientist pioner of aviation.
He deserves to be much known by people.
I have a few pionering ideas of human flight
*You are dreaming. The first real scientist pioner of aviation has been the Romanian Traian Vuia :**en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Traian_Vuia*
@@danvision5086 You are dreaming. The man you’re talking about, was born 24 years later than Lilienthal.
Lilienthal published his first book about aerodynamics in 1889.
He began to fly in 1891.
At Best, your man is the second one.
@@bertrandviolette9008 *I know, but the story is a bit more complicated. Special documents from China, via Marco Polo, Venice, etc. ( Da Vinci has got all the documents from the Dodge, Venice, etc. etc.. I am tired about fakes...*
@@danvision5086
We are talking about the first scientific approach of flight, here, and Lilienthal is the first in that.
History of aviation is ok to recognize that.
When i was studying aerodynamics, in France, the graphics about lift and drag (polaire de portance et traînée) were also called Lilienthal’s polaires), and not chinese, da Vinci, or Traian Vuia, or what else.
Bleriot, Santos Dumont, Voisin, for example, first flew before Traian Vuia, but they can’t be describe as pioner of the scientific approach of aviation, and even less about aerodynamics. Even if Bleriot had a scientific approach of his designs.
Many thanks. Absolutely fascinating to watch. Lilienthal was truly the father of hang-gliding. I know that people are saying the ancient Chinese invented flight, but we do not have sufficient information about their machines. I should be patriotic and say that George Cayley in the UK created a primitive glider in the early 1850s. Later in the 1890s, another Englishman Percy Pilcher visited Lilienthal several times and was inspired by him, flying similar machines. Pilcher died back home after an in-flight structural failure in 1899.
My thoughts as an ex-weight shift pilot: The tailplane should have been more controllable. I believe the high relative angle of incidence between the wing and the tailplane/stabiliser would keep the aircraft stable only within a narrow speed range. It was stable as set up, but diving/gaining speed would produce a rapid automatic nose-up correction that would keep the pilot very busy! It would have been a 'phugoid flyer' if flown long distance, I believe. That is not to dismiss any of the pioneering work that Lilienthal made, however - an amazing, talented person who gave his life for scientific progress.
I forgot to add, a big thankyou to everyone involved in the project.
Actually it was Bill Gates who invented flight.
@@travelbugse2829 You also forgot to mention Cayley's glider did fly and it is well documented as such. Several reconstructions of Cayley's machine have also been successfully flown. There seem to be some German propogandists around these days that are promoting Lilienthal to be the first in flight and the 'father of flight', they are totally wrong, and the honour rightfully belongs to Cayley.
*en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Traian_Vuia*
Leonardo De Vinci had an airplane design but no one knows if he actually built and flew it.
Thank you for allowing us to watch what the first flights were like.
Over fifty years ago I made a glider from old charts....I was on a ship in the south Atlantic...It wasn't particular scientific although I did understand the principal of having a curved wing, for lift. The main spar was tightly rolled and glued paper with the wing shape formed over it, it was about 1.5 metre wing span, The fuselage was formed in a similar fashion to the wing spar. The tail was formed in a similar fashion. I had to guess, educated guess, at the centre of gravity....When all was finished I sneaked it to the bridge whilst on watch with the Mate. It was a relatively calm, but a heavy rolling swell running. We stood on the wing of the bridge..... and launched my creation into a fifteen knot head wind created by the ship. The glider soared upwards then rolled towards the waves then to our surprise it skimmed the water like an Albatros. Its total flight time was between 10-15 seconds before it alight on the water ...and was gone...Watching this video of a pioneer of flight returned me to that day so long ago...
This is a great film! I started hang gliding in ‘78 and, of course, read about Otto. Watching the first flight in the wind tunnel and then on the winch, brought back so much. The short flight off the sand dunes reminds me of my first hops off a hill above Merthyr. Not much to beat this form of flying.
Hi Martin , a great film indeed , it brought back those exiting memories just before take off and impending flight on many of the site that the SE. Wales club flew . Cheers !!
I remember reading about Lilienthal in elementary school. he may be one of the reasons I got my pilots license. Great vid.
I brought the plans for this glider to Home Depot. I went to the pvc/plumbing, plastic sheeting section, and the rope department and asked for help, their staff looked at the plans in each area, then me, and walked away. I was blocked from access to the duct tape isle and they confiscated my Home Depot charge card, mumbling something about liability and insurance risks and someone even mentioned needing mental evaluations...
Thank you Otto, won't be making that mistake any more, next time will shop at Walmart, you should have warned us!
as a home depot employee and a fan of aviation history I would have been fascinated and i would love to help you find parts, but ive met people in the store who are doing dangerous things, and there are things we cant help with. if i thought somebody didnt have the technical understanding to tackle this, i would probably recommend the to build a kite version to understand, as i believe the wright brothers did
@@casychapin4647 I would want to go to your store and be the person I talk to along assembling the supplies and tools I need for the project. I would also grab some random, cheap tool on the way out. Upon check out, I would be certain to require a check out person help me upon and casually tell them what I am building, and that you were the person to help me gather the tools and supplies. That I was only there to purchase, x tool only, that last one I grabbed on the way out, and imply these extra purchases for what I am making was your idea..... lol. I was joking on my original response, still, on a serious note, I do in fact buy things for remote control aircraft builds and the foam that's normally being used for insulation is one of my go-to materials on many of my builds, so I do mention to them if I need their help, what the stock is for, and it's always cool seeing a smile on their faces knowing it's going for something cool, not merely stuck inside of some wall.
Goes to show what a narrow minded world we now live in . I doubt if the wheel would have been invented if humans had been this risk adverse back then!
Magical! Congratulations to both Lilienthal and Raffel. Brave? Yes. Foolhardy? Probably. Brilliant? Without a doubt.
"Was it a fault in the material or was it a constructional defect?" I believe the idea that the storks don't flap their wings does not mean that their wings are rigid/fixed. Even in the video of the flying stork, a close observation reveals the wings are flexing, bending, turning, twisting. While it's subtle from a distance away, the wings are far from just randomly flexing from wind/loads. Hence, the major flaw in the assumption that it can be duplicated with a flexible model. None -the-less, He deserves the recognition and all the world-wide credit for his historical achievement!!
Oh, I love this. The brilliance and courage of Otto. A flying machine that the inventor was probably the only person who COULD fly it.
I have to say that he died DOING his dream and inspiration. Flying.
Has no one ever heard of Sir John Cayley and his 'man flyer'? Otto did some sterling work but he was NOT the first to experience heavier than air manned flight. Cayley's 'man flyer' flew in 1853 across Brompton Dale in Yorkshire. Wickepedia has a good description of his life and times. Much of his empirical research established the principles and the theory of aerofoils and is reputed to have been used by the Wright Brothers. There is a full size working replica of his man flyer to be seen in the Yorkshire Air Museum. It was used in a film and flown by Derek Piggot. But full kudos to the professor and his team.
I will check him out. Thanks for the information.
ruclips.net/video/-MSZUux4eTk/видео.html
Cayley got his "man" to fly it. And his man said, "Never again!"
@@alangknowles Correct.
I too had a fascination for flight from an early age. By 1976 Hang - gliding had arrived in Britain and at 30 years of age this was my introduction to real natural un-powered flight from the beautiful coastal resort of Rhossily on the Gower coast of Wales . After my first two seater flight on a seated Highway glider with an instructor. After a top to bottom flight from 600ft I was HOOKED! My last flight was on a second hand Highway Demon glider from Merthyr Common in 1989 , my longest flight being 3Hrs. Later at the tender age of 6o I was able to obtain a NPPL licence flying a Cessna 150 , but regard my time on Hang-gliders the most exiting and natural way to fly . Hi! to Martin Hann by the way, what great days the were in the SE Wales Hang -Gliding Club.
As a retired pilot I loved this historic legend aviation scientist's recreation to prove RHO for lift
*en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Traian_Vuia*
A break on a control thread string wire probably caused Lilienthal's glider crash.
Gracias a todos los que produjeron este maravilloso documento y la recreación de una obra maestra de vuelo de Otto. Siempre me llamó la atención su diseño. Creo que no tiene su justo reconocimiento en la historia de la aviación, así que este video lo acerca a su correcto lugar en la historia, lo veré más de una vez.
Great build and bold flight experiments. Amazing that such a flying craft was designed so long ago.
Just wonderful. Bravo. BRAVISSIMO
This is really awesome..😊
The way they took their time to build it from the beginning to the end is quite amazing.... good job guys..🤝
I remember building a human artificial wing in 2008 and it was successful...but the saddest part is that people keep doubting it because I'm from west Africa..🤦🏽
Although any moment from now I will shock my doubters by resurrecting that invention..🤝
You should be proud! Keep striving to achieve your goal, and fly freely with your own glider or wing.
Another similar pioneer was Gustav Whitehead. He was an early engine builder for the time. He went further by adding his engine to a Lilienthal style glider. Reports are that he flew it often, before the wright brothers, but wasnt documented properly. Credit should be given to early pioneers who had success. The Wright Brothers invented aeronautics but they werent first to fly.
I was a high school kid in the late 60s. I built several hangliders, that skimmed the ground . We were considered wierdos and disrespected. Fortunately I saw the danger and quit before they killed me. During that time there were many deaths to young experimenters. . Today there are standards that hangliders must meet to be safe. Our progress has been made on the shoulders of those who came and died before us, like Otto. If you look at those picture of him way back then, he was muscular looking, strong and intelligent. Like someone i might have known when i was his age. Honor history, salute to Otto Lilienthal.
Dumont was the summit .made the first fully controlled with all steps of flying and won the paris international prize with witness and never asked any patent and never wanted to profit from it. wright were grifters
Richard Pearce from New Zealand could of been first to fly also
I read of him and saw photos as a child. I've always remembered his name. I really had a thing for flying when I was a child.
¡Felicitaciones a todo el equipo! Por recrear éstos: 7 segundos para la eternidad. Con el espíritu sobre la genialidad de Don Otto Lilienthal Reciban mis saludos.
no crees que con alas mas grande podría volar correctamente?
What a great fun these guys had recreating achievements of Otto!!!
Wowww! This documentary is pure gold, these guys are real heros, I'm speachless.
That was impressive and well worth watching. Thank you for sharing this incredible story.
And now we have Paragliders that in the right air conditions can stay aloft for hours just using rising columns of air.
Very nice.
I studied Otto Liliethal at school 50 years ago and very much wanted to build and fly my own glider, but didn't. He built an artificial hill 15 m (50 feet) high as he lived in a flat area with no suitable hills to launch from and I often admired the amount of work that would have taken.
OMG, congratulations ! This is true genuine science. This team and Otto are now in History with big H.
Wonderful recreation of the Lillienthal glider. I did notice that there is instability of the tail relative to the wing. I don’t know if that was taken into account by Otto. I wonder if modifying his design to stabilize the relative movement of the tail would help or hinder the flight characteristics?
You ain't kidding brother, that thing was flapping around like it was made with toothpicks and rubber bands. Definitely could stand some reinforcement.
With my own models, mere random flexes made no big difference; it's the average that seems be important.
it would definitely help increase the flight time by been able to pitch the nose up and down with the stabilizer but back then probably didn't have and accurate idea of what a bird's tail is really supposed to do, whe you look at a bird flying, tail looks fixed in one position only, when.
In order to reduce the total weight of the aircraft, all bamboo rounded by rope will make it durable and is to be used instead of wooden rod in modification. A vertical enclosed bamboo loop is also to be installed and tied in the front part of the aircraft as the support for airman's feet and used as a step for his up and down jumping movement and such movement is similar to add energy to the wings during flying. No energy to be transferred to wings movement won't fly longer. Moreover, an additional of two parachutes to be installed at the left and right wings which would be opened after flying to increase uplift forces when required. I think that it will fly longer and land safely after modification.
Amazing history....
Congratulations professor...
7 seconds of pure joy! What a video!!!
This was awesome. If only Lilienthal could see his influence.
That was the greatest invention, indeed! Great respect for him, moreover note that people new nothing about aerodynamics... Later the famous Soviet aircraft engineer Andrey Tupolev said that "give me a great engine and I'll make a brick fly"
Americans used this concept of Tupolev during the II war in various aircraft projects, doing them around even more powering radial engines....
People knew about birds, so knew about aerodynamics. They just didn't know much. For example the birds wing is curved and the tail is used to steer like a rudder on a boat.
@@tedmoss well, people new birds for millions of years. But how few it turned out when it came time to construct a air plane wing! First, the profile of it... Aha, now starts the new unpaved road
This project was carried out with typical German precision, and they clearly got to understand how the Lilienthal flying machine worked. But as a Hang Glider pilot from the very beggining , I know that trying to judge the flying characteristics of a glider like this on FLAT earth will not work very well. This type of flying machine needs the air to have a componant of rising up to meet the machine, as one has when flying it from a hill top. In their wind tunnel, the air was coming AT them, not UP to them and this is very important. When you stand on the top of a hill, you can feel the air coming up under you and all you need to do is take a couple of steps and the glider lifts up. Then you move you weight forwards, and the machine lowers its nose and moves forward, but because of the rising air the machine, also rises. This is exactly why the Lilienthal glider flew so successfully and is also the exact same way that modern day Hang Gliders fly. Otto was in essence the very first Hang Glider Pilot in the world!!
Great to see. I* was a Lilienthal enthusiast 40 years ago.
3.00 'in those days of course the strucure of the cloth was created without a punchcard'. I wouldn't be so sure, thats a Jaquard loom, they'd been around for 100 years by then - the first truly programmable machine, as all computer history nerds know.
That was awesome to watch, thanks for bringing it back and proving it can fly. 👍👍👍💯
Just wonderful, I had never seen this beutiful glider before or the inventor.
Whoever flew before Otto forgot to tell the others how it works. After Otto’s flight demonstrations, people started flying all over the world. History books are full of stories about men who flew earlier, but even if they were all true, no one changed the course of history.
Amazing 👌
Fascinating to see old creations and first attempts!
Building Lilienthal's glider from his own design using original as could be gathered and made materials was a fascinating and historical project. I wonder who of these scientists, aeronautical engineers and builders ever read or saw anything of the Wills brothers in southern California. The Wills brothers knew of Lilienthal and his glider, and built their own gliders from scratch and would up flying for miles and staying airborne for hours. They basically reinvented the hang glider and built up a successful, for a time, hang glider company. I bought a hang glider in 1974 and taking off into the air is a remarkable experience, one Otto did for the first time back in 1891. His insight into flight by watching storks fly overhead and studying a bird's wings is a seminal part of the history of flight.
the proof is absolutely provided by these people!
respect!
now having seen this you would like to shout more more,
but on the other hand, you shouldn't take any unnecessary risks!
Friendly greetings from The Netherlands!
Rob👍
Congratulations on this amazing success. It took a lot of dedication and perseverance that I'm sure mimicked Lilienthal all the way down to the last bead of sweat heartbeat from an adrenaline filled flight. Proof positive his place in history is well deserved and eternally secure. Anything could have caused his crash, a gust of wind, fatigue or even a moment of broken concentration.
A very interesting book on the subject is by David Gierke, "To Caress the Air". It is based on the civil case of A.Herring vs. Glenn Curtis and in it you will find the involvement of A Herring and powered flight.
Learned to fly hang gliders in 1974 and later taught lessons near Sand City. A place called Marina Beach. I always revered Otto Lilienthal as the first hang glider pilot.
Marina Beach State Park north of Sand City was indeed the place where I flew the normal soaring apparatus replica as well as the Large Bi-Plane and Otto”s Experimental Pono plane together with Andy Beem (Windsports, LA) and George Reeves.
Undoubtedly Lilienthal was a keen observer of bird's wings and he put his observations to work in developing one of the World's First Gliders. Very nice recreation of the original.
That's where you're wrong, in Imperial Britain, a man by the name of Sir George Cayley made a glider with the keen importance parts of aircraft, lift, thrust, gravity, and drag in mind, the design has the wing and tail section suspended with solid material and the little carriage on the bottom of the plane, the source I got this information from is AmazingViz's First in Aviation 3D, which shows two planes before the Wright Flyer, the glider I just mentioned and also another areoplane powered by three engines with three propellers, in 1888 made in France and is now displayed in a museum in Paris, 35 years after the 1853 British glider, which makes it the real World's First Glider, before Otto Lilienthal.
@@cablecar3683 Duly noted and original comment updated. Thank you.
Thank you! That is beautiful.
It appears from the wind tunnel tests that the pilot sits right at the center of pressure, or even behind, rendering it unstable unless he pulls his weight forward slightly, moving his weight, and the center of gravity, slightly ahead of the center of pressure, making it stable and controllable. But what's with that flapping, loose empennage? Not only is airflow to it blocked by the wing, it seems very passive.
First in flight of any kind (hot air balloon): Jean Pilatre de Rozier
First in unpowered heavier than air flight: Otto Lilienthal
First in powered heavier than air flight: Orville Wright
The Wright brothers flew unpowered heavier than air gliders successfully for years prior to their first successful powered flight.
Blimps and Rigid Airships flew from 1852 to the present with a variety of accomplishments during that time. Filled the gap in the time between hot air balloons and the Wrights first powered flight.
@@TugIronChief that's a new one. now prove it.
The first to fly hot air ballons were Montgolfier brothers and a brazilian father Bartolomeu de Gusmao with public assistance ...
@@kkteutsch6416 good correction
what? no rolls or jumping from a skyscraper? pfpff
joking! Remarkable journey and amazing success. congrats to everyone involved and the many hours of sweat, tears and joy
I agree Lidmark; but if you look at the title they say "first in flight" Also it appears by their video that really this glider was incapable of being launched without a head wind and may not have had enough lift even then to lift a normal size human into equiliibrium ; ie it would immediatley start to decend even going 50 kph. I think he understood the principles - thats true; and perhaps if he didn't die he would have built a real glider that actually flew without a head wind and might actually rise without having to go 50 Kph.
They were so careful on getting all of the details correct, but I was a little disappointed that he didn't wear lederhosen and high socks. Would have been so easy.
Your film makes it sound like Otto crashed on his first flight. Otto Lilienthal flew gliders about two thousand times over a period of five years before his fatal flight.
No one said that.
Check from 5m15s-
This was literally mentioned in the video
Then, you have a hearing problem. Time to have your ears checked.
It is very possible to crash without being killed. I did many times using a hang glider and once in my plane.
Have they considered the height and weight of Lilienthal? I believed he designed the glider's wing size and strength based on his own body statistics.
Good point. The pilot in the video is a big guy (though slim). I'm thinking that an actual hangglider pilot of shorter lighter stature would be a better match than a tall airplane pilot?
Since man had flown a hundred years early, and higher up to 30,000 ft and longer; I dare say there are aircraft that did not rely on Lilienthals insights. It was only 3 years later that the first Zeppline was built and flew several miles in 1900.
Otto Lilienthal was the pioneer on the science of flying due to the principle heavier than air.
Flying due to the principles of lighter than air was an established technology by his time.
the scene of the pilot letting go of the controls and slowly getting out of the machine gives me a very strange feeling. It's beautiful.
like the story of Icarus, Otto's dream will always be relived by those that reach to the sky and push to go beyond!
Wow thank you all for this fantastic work and video
Beautiful! Thank you for posting this.
Yes
,but in 1894 Lawrence Hargraves flew his Box kite designs at Stanwell Tops, Sth of Sydney Australia.
These designs which the Wright brothers, who had been in correspondence with were the designs they adopted.
Credit due, but often Hargraves work is forgotten.
Having Otto in your name seems to be connected to many great inventors of the world. My last name is Otto and I have inventions I’m working on🧐
Обалдеть сколько людей которые пробовали сделать попытки с планером. Я ничего подобного не делал. В детстве только с одной ужасной горы скатился на двух колесах. И когда был подростковом возрасте сделал большой коробчатый китайский змей. Размах был почти под метр. Он очень хорошо поднимался в воздух. Я побежал его запускать. В определенный момент поток воздуха исчез, и он с большим ускорением полетел к земле. Вся конструкция разлетелась. Было жалко... Основная проблема планера это нестабильные потоки воздуха. Да они есть, но они возникают и исчезают.
While this is yet another step towards flight, it ignores the earlier contributions of George Caley the "Father of Flight" whose coachman was the pilot for his heavier than air gliders in successfully flying in 1853. So yes Otto was the first inventor to test his own devices, but history had already been made!
I bet that looks good in his log book. Having different aircraft certification is always a proud thing.
I am very curious to know if there is any historical evidence of Lillianthlal’s determination of the proper center of gravity for his glider.
Abba's ben fernnas is the one em i right?
Wasn't Lilienthal's craft basically a hang glider?
Sir George Caley in Yorkshire England flew his first model Glider in 1804 and a successful flight was made in a manned Glider with his footman as Pilot in 1853. This was the first Glider flight useing the understanding the principles of Weight,Thrust,Drag and Lift in the design which he discovered and recorded . The Wright Brothers used those principles in their design in the first powered flight,NASA accept Caley as the Father of Aviation as he was the first to understand the principles of flight.
A brilliant reconstruction but fails to acknowledge the work of George Cayley the true inventor of flight as long ago as 1799 and subsequently flew his first glider with pilot in 1804!
I was in Sand City California dozens of times. They fly paragliders there. Respect to all aviators.
I live right near Sand City, wish I would have known, definitely would have watched this!
They had this glider in California. I wonder if they had given thought to flying it off the cliff at Torrey Pines, CA.
That's so cool, I do find it funny that the scientists couldn't that Otto control his glider in a similar way to hang gliders of today.
That was beautiful, I wonder if they can make another one using modern materials and technology applied
Sir George Cayley's reluctant coachman flew in 1853 predating Otto Lillienthal's outstanding success. Both Bill Frost of Wales in 1896 and Gustav Whitehead of USA in 1981 reportedly achieved powered flight, Frost's first flight achieved a distance of 500mtrs. Orville Wright went to a lot of trouble to discredit Whitehead in order to protect the Wright's historic claim, some consider that somewhat suspicious.
Viewing the few photos I've seen of Otto's flights, he was seated if you will, in a waist sling. The required excess strength, needed without a stable seat, would draw too much attention to aright the aircraft. A seated pilot, exercising the center of gravity by weight shift, would have a better chance of longer flight times.
All the best to your beautiful Channel hopefully your subscribers and viewers will keep increasing 🇴🇲
Wow... !!! My best friend, It's always great. I wish you every day of your development. Have a happy day!
i am thrilled by how satisfying this is
ESPETACULAR!!! CONGRATULAÇÕES DO BRASIL!!!
👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
Not Santos Dumont or Wright brothers, but, Otto Lilienthal! Bravo!!
Man has some guts to free fly that bird. Terrific job sir.
What's the difference between this and the hang gliders of today? For one thing, the current designs are simpler and lighter in weight, with a much better glide ratio. Skilled pilots can take off using the strong and steady updraft over the top of sand dunes next to the sea and soar up very high. You can find videos online taken from onboard cameras showing them climbing up 4,000 meters or more. The all-time altitude record without power or oxygen is so high, they assumed the woman who set it would be dead upon landing, but she wasn't. The limiting factor is not just oxygen, but the cold temperature. The noteworthy aspect of Lilienthal's glider is that it was the first that is known.
I'm amazed at how many people don't grasp what Lilienthal did - so many here don't understand he was in control. Gliding is flying. When an eagle is soaring - is he not flying? Whoever said the wings need to be narrower and longer doesn't understand that such configuration would make it less controllable in a weight shifting glider. Was Lilienthal the first man to ride a glider? No. But Lilienthal rode a glider thousands of times, in public, and he inspired others - something that attempts before the 19th century didn't do.
Basically the first successful glider, this can't be taken away from Mr Otto, Fast forward to the Wright Brother to get it right
Parabéns a esta equipe que realizou um projeto que muitos, talvez jamais diria que funcionaria.
Hargreaves of Australia flew in a box-kite in 1894, two years before Otto!
Get your facts right.
George Cayley's coachman flew before then as well. That glider has also been reconstructed and flown.
Box-kite gliders / kites flew as military spotting machines for quite a while.
Santos-Dumont probably flew in South America, and another flight by one Percy Pilcher near where I live is unfortunately very badly documented, but his design has also been tested as a flying model, and while very draggy, flew.
The history of early flight is complex, tainted by later Nationalism, and by very bad reporting by people who could not take the time to explain in any detail.
Lillienthal has the benefit of a large number of photographs by many different witnesses, and he didn't build, fly and die in secrecy, like so many.
Wow, that's a great video. I will always cheer for you in Korea I'm looking forward to a great video. Have a nice day.
This is truly amazing but such strong words... There are different examples of this attempt before Otto. Leonardo Da Vinci who attempted to fly his example. He lived between 1452 -1519. Also an Ottoman (Today's Turkey) scientist called Hazerfan Ahmet Celebi (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hez%C3%A2rfen_Ahmed_%C3%87elebi) who lived between 1609-1640 flew his glider from European continent of Istanbul to Asian side of Istanbul approx. 3500 meters.
Rubbish
I think there was people who - like this guy - recreated Leonardo De Vinci airplane. No one knows if it was actually flown. His parachute was recreated and was shown to actually work.
I will check out Ottoman. Thanks for the link.
@@mikeannear1719 rubbish, just a single word that you can add to this topic?How valuable! Find something suitable to your IQ.
24:46 That's falling, with style.
Great,,,We waiting for next experiment video.
I think the horizontal tail is angled too much.
The original angle is much smaller.
Why did you change the design?
This causes the plane to lose stability.