182/230
[ arrêter le diaporama ]

Da Vinci’s parachute

Da Vinci’s parachute.jpg Giffard’s steam dirigible, 1852MiniaturesJullien’s model dirigible, 1850Giffard’s steam dirigible, 1852MiniaturesJullien’s model dirigible, 1850Giffard’s steam dirigible, 1852MiniaturesJullien’s model dirigible, 1850Giffard’s steam dirigible, 1852MiniaturesJullien’s model dirigible, 1850

Da Vinci’s third scheme for human flight, was a framed sail on which a man could ride downward, if not upward. This device never fails to navigate with its confiding sailor. Sometimes he lands in one posture, again in another; but voyage he must, with the certainty of gravitation. Leonardo is, therefore, the father of the parachute. This, in turn, has had a varied offspring. The common parachute, the aërial glider, the soaring machine, or passive aëroplane, that rides the wind without motive power and without loss of energy.