23 October 1906

The Santos-Dumont airplane in full flight at Bagatelle, October 23, 1906. (This photograph, unfortunately too retouched, is to our knowledge, the only one which appears to have actually been taken that day during the aerial journey.)” (Cliché Branger/L’Aerophile, October 1906, at Page 246)

23 October 1906: At 4:45 p.m., Albert Santos-Dumont climbed into his airplane, N° 14 bis, at the Château de Bagatelle, Paris, France. Starting its Antoinette engine, it  began rolling and quickly balanced on its two wheels. Passed an estimated 30 km/h and travelled approximately 100 meters on the ground before becoming airborne. for a while the height above the ground was minimal. The airplane gradually climbed, remaining perfectly balanced longitudinally. Lateral balance was also good. The airplane began to drift to the right, then more so to the left. Fearing this might become more pronounced, Santos-Dumont cut of the ignition and his airplane slowly descended. On touchdown, the wheels and rudder were damaged.

14 bis

N° 14 bis powered by a Antoinette 50 ch liquid-cooled V-8 engine two-bladed propeller by Léon Levavasseur, steel with aluminum airfoils. 2 meters in diameter, pitch 1 meter, 8 kg. Thrust: 146 kg.

took off and flew between 50 and 100 meters (164–328 feet) at an altitude of 3–5 meters (10–16 feet).

Unlike Wright Brothers flights, Santos-Dumont made his flights before the public. Flight was certified by

Sources vary as to the dimensions of the airplane. The Smithsonian reports that dimensions taken from the Official List of Records of the Aero Club of France Span 40 feet, length 33 feet, surface 860 sq feet, weight 352 pounds Antoinette 24 h.p.

direct-fuel-injected liquid-cooled 105mm x 105 mm, 50 ch (49.3 h.p.) @ 1,400 r.p.m. 132# (60 kg) 7.27 liters (443.86 cubic inches)

Jane’s All The World Aircraft 1913:  L: 31’10”, WS: 38’9″, wt: 661 pounds. pronoucned dihedral. canard, three-bay (Hargrave’s cells) boxkite/biplane, box elevators forward. standining in a wicker basket.

14 bis

bamboo poles covered with silk

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About Bryan Swopes

Bryan R. Swopes grew up in Southern California in the 1950s–60s, near the center of America's aerospace industry. He has had a life-long interest in aviation and space flight. Bryan is a retired commercial helicopter pilot and flight instructor.

2 thoughts on “23 October 1906

  1. took off and flew between 50 and 100 meters (164–328 feet) at an altitude of 3–5 meters (10–16 feet).

    Unlike Wright Brothers flights, Santos-Dumont made his flights before the public. Flight was certified by

    Sources vary as to the dimensions of the airplane. The Smithsonian reports that dimensions taken from the Official List of Records of the Aero Club of France Span 40 feet, length 33 feet, surface 860 sq feet, weight 352 pounds Antoinette 24 h.p.

    direct-fuel-injected liquid-cooled 105mm x 105 mm, 50 ch (49.3 h.p.) @ 1,400 r.p.m. 132# (60 kg) 7.27 liters (443.86 cubic inches)

    Jane’s All The World Aircraft 1913: L: 31’10”, WS: 38’9″, wt: 661 pounds. pronoucned

    This section seems disjointed and “pronounced” is misspelled at end. Looks like the sentences got jumbled

    1. Eric, this is an unfinished draft. Essentially, these are my notes. I got too busy to finish it, but felt it was better just to put the information out there and try to finish it later. Sometimes, there just isn’t enough time.

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