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Da Vinci’s helicopter

Da Vinci’s helicopter.jpg Route of British military dirigibles from France to England, 1900ThumbnailsDa Vinci’s parachuteRoute of British military dirigibles from France to England, 1900ThumbnailsDa Vinci’s parachuteRoute of British military dirigibles from France to England, 1900ThumbnailsDa Vinci’s parachuteRoute of British military dirigibles from France to England, 1900ThumbnailsDa Vinci’s parachute
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Da Vinci’s second flyer was a helicopter. An aërial screw 96 feet in diameter was to be turned by a strong and nimble artist who might, by prodigious effort, lift himself for a short time. Though various small paper screws were made to ascend in the air, the larger enterprise was never seriously undertaken. Many subsequent inventors developed the same project; but the fellow turning the screw always found it dreadful toil and a hopelessly futile task. Of late the man-driven helicopter has been abandoned, but the motor-driven one is very much cultivated. Scores of inventors in recent years, aided by light motors, have been trying to screw boldly skyward, and some have succeeded in rising on a helicopter carrying one man.

Author
Aërial Navigation
A Popular Treatise on the Growth of Air Craft and on Aëronautical Meteorology
By Albert Francis Zahm
Published in 1911
Available from gutenberg.org
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671*461
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