I am indebted to Dirk Blouw for providing the following link that includes this explanation of the folding wing shown in the previous post:
“First functional wing-folding mechanism, enabling aircraft to take up less space on ships.
I am indebted to Dirk Blouw for providing the following link that includes this explanation of the folding wing shown in the previous post:
“First functional wing-folding mechanism, enabling aircraft to take up less space on ships.
I posted pictures from a similar ‘plane from Duxford a while ago. This one is from PIMA and shows the hinge that allows the wings to be swept back for storage on an aircraft carrier. There is a single axis hinge and one flap that falls down to accommodate the movement and then come back together with a continuous aerodynamic surface. It must have taken some working out – I wonder if this was done through drawings or models?
While at the sound mirrors last weekend there was a man with recording equipment who was working with them in their intended range of performance. I suspect he was fishing to close to the surface and too low on the dish to find anything other than aircraft, but would be fascinated to hear what he caught.
On the way back from the sound mirrors we went to Dungeness. I very much enjoy the assembly of seemingly unrelated pieces that seem to make their own sort of sense. The way the ground is left to its own devices accounts for much of this assembly – a tentative infrastructure.
This is also my 365th post on this blog in just under two years that it has been running – so just over a post every two days.
Another vist to the Denge Sound Mirrors today, the last of the summer open days when there is access to the island where three sound mirrors sit. I will sift through the photographs and post a few more tomorrow. The site only opens after two O’clock, when the sun has already passed the reflective surface of the mirrors, so most of my pictures are of the rear surfaces. As the position of the sun changed the texture, facets and board marks conspired with the geometry to provide a lesson in sciagraphy. I will post some examples tomorrow.