![](https://coimages.sciencemuseumgroup.org.uk/43/454/large_thumbnail_1963_0160.jpg)
Model of Samuel Pierpoint Langley's 'Aerodrome' (1903)
- Made:
- 1926 in Washington and South Kensington
- maker:
- Samuel Pierpont Langley and Science Museum, Workshops
Model of Samuel Pierpoint Langley's 'Aerodrome' (1903), scale 1:10, by Science Museum, Workshops, South Kensington, London, England, 1926
Model of Langley's 'Aerodrome' (1903) scale 1:10 The full-size Aerodrome, with a wing span of 48 ft (16m) and powered by a 52 hp engine, was completed in 1903, and two attempts were made by Charles Manly to pilot it over the Potomac River in Washington DC that same year. On both occasions the aeroplane fouled the launcher and dropped into the river. The Aerodrome was powered by a Manly-Balzer engine, the first petrol engine to be designed specifically for a full-sized aeroplane, a remarkable achievement. After Manly had altered and refined the rotary design of Balzer, the original engine builder, it provided 52 hp.
Details
- Category:
- Aeronautics
- Object Number:
- 1926-1050
- Materials:
- wood (unidentified), paper (fibre product) and metal (unknown)
- type:
- model - representation and aircraft
- credit:
- Smith, F.T.