monoplane$50172$ - definizione. Che cos'è monoplane$50172$
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Cosa (chi) è monoplane$50172$ - definizione

TYPE OF AIRCRAFT
Monoplane (1874); Du Temple monoplane; De Temple monoplane
  • 1857 [[patent drawing]] of Félix du Temple's flying machine, the "Canot planeur".
  • Reconstructed model of Du Temple's 1857 flying machine at the [[Musée de l'Air et de l'Espace]].

Lee-Richards annular monoplane         
  • Non-flying replica of the biplane
During the pioneer years before the First World War, Cedric Lee and G. Tilghman Richards in the UK built and flew a series of aircraft having a novel flat ring-shaped or annular wing.
Głowiński monoplane         
The so-called Głowiński monoplane was an otherwise unnamed aircraft built by Bronisław Głowiński in Poland in 1911, and which became the first aircraft built on Polish territory to fly.There were several earlier flying aircraft built by Poles in Austria or Germany, most notably Adolf Warchałowski, and aircraft built on Polish territory, that were not able to complete a successful flight.
Star Monoplane         
AIRCRAFT MODEL
Star 1910 Monoplane; Star monoplane
The Star Monoplane was an early British aircraft built by the Star Engineering Company of Wolverhampton. A tractor configuration monoplane resembling the French Antoinette aircraft, its most remarkable feature was the arrangement of the rear control surfaces.

Wikipedia

Du Temple Monoplane

The du Temple Monoplane was a steam-powered aircraft made of aluminium, built in Brest, France, by naval officer Félix du Temple in 1874.

It had a wingspan of 13 m (43 ft) and weighed 80 kg (180 lb) without the pilot.

Several trials were made with the aircraft, and it is generally recognized that it achieved lift-off – described by Dollfus as "short hop or leap" and in Flight International as "staggered briefly into the air" – (from a combination of its own power and running down an inclined ramp), glided for a short time and returned safely to the ground, making it the first successful powered flight in history though not the first self-powered one.

It was displayed at the 1878 Exposition Universelle ("World Fair") in Paris.