Apparently, the first electric powered flight was "135 years ago" (1884?) in France. The airship was piloted by Capt. Charles Renard and was named La France. It attained the speed of 13 mph (Model Aviation, March, 2019, p.12). Maybe the green revolution will allow us to experience that thrill.
What I am really writing about is the evolution of electric model flight. There is an 1909 report that is unsubstantiated, but a substantiated report from 1957 caught my eye. It is described in the same Model Aviation issue mentioned above (MA's servers are down, I cannot link). Apparently a Col. H.J.Taplin in the UK was able to maintain flight for 10 minutes using "accumulators." Here's a video link :
https://www.britishpathe.com/video/electrically-powered-model-planes/query/Birchington
Maybe someone with digital access to Model Aviation can share that link too. The quoted price in today's dollars for the "accumulators" is $924. Are they a forerunner of today's super capacitors? I began flying RC in about 1952-1953 and our batteries were no where nearly that expensive.
What is an "accumulator?"
John
What I am really writing about is the evolution of electric model flight. There is an 1909 report that is unsubstantiated, but a substantiated report from 1957 caught my eye. It is described in the same Model Aviation issue mentioned above (MA's servers are down, I cannot link). Apparently a Col. H.J.Taplin in the UK was able to maintain flight for 10 minutes using "accumulators." Here's a video link :
https://www.britishpathe.com/video/electrically-powered-model-planes/query/Birchington
Maybe someone with digital access to Model Aviation can share that link too. The quoted price in today's dollars for the "accumulators" is $924. Are they a forerunner of today's super capacitors? I began flying RC in about 1952-1953 and our batteries were no where nearly that expensive.
What is an "accumulator?"
John