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The Wrong Stuff?: Attempts at Flight Before (& After) the Wright Brothers by Phil Scott

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This year, America celebrates the 100th anniversary of the Wright Brothers' history-making flight at Kitty Hawk. But for those other pioneers whose efforts to fly never got off the ground, there is no celebration. Plenty of people attempted flight before the Wright Brothers and failed. Many others came after the Wright Brothers, hoping they could do better, and also failed. Now aviation journalist Phil Scott gives these glorious (and often hilarious) failures their due in his new book, The Wrong Stuff? Attempts at Flight Before (and After) the Wright Brothers.With scores of photographs and a wry text, The Wrong Stuff? presents a veritable fleet of failed aircraft, ranging from the inventive to the outlandish to the just plain weird. Scott's dramatis personae include not just obscure inventors but also such celebrated figures as Leonardo Da Vinci, Alexander Graham Bell, Hiram Maxim (inventor of the Maxim Machine Gun), Howard Hughes, and a distant relative of George Armstrong Custer whose luck with planes paralleled his ancestor's luck with Indians."For most of history," Scott writes, "people didn't have a clue how to fly. But still they tried, God love 'em." In the 1500s, Leonardo designed a pair of human powered wings. They were never constructed, which is just as well; according to his specs, they would have weighed more than 500 pounds. Subsequent centuries saw equally impractical devices, powered by everything from bicycles to steam engines, and Scott chronicles them all. There were human-driven helicopters and car-plane hybrids. There was the Aerial Steam Carriage, the Vertijet, the Flying Pancake, the Rotabuggy, the Fleep, the Pogo, and the Inflatoplane (yes, it's what you an inflatable airplane). There were early, rickety versions of the jet and the stealth plane. There were vehicles with two wings, three wings, seven wings, no wings. They were launched from hilltops, cliffs, horse-drawn carts, catapults, ramps and lakes. And they all had one thing in common.They didn't work.In The Wrong Stuff?, these inept inventions all rate an E for effort, and their hapless creators get a well-deserved moment in the sun.

Mass Market Paperback

First published October 25, 2003

15 people want to read

About the author

Phil Scott

88 books5 followers
Award-winning writer Phil Scott has been published in such magazines as Air & Space/Smithsonian, Scientific American, Boating and Popular Science. Scott is also the author of seven nonfiction books: Hemingway's Hurricane, The Shoulders of Giants, The Pioneers of Flight, 21st Century Soldier, The Wrong Stuff, Deadly, and Then and Now. He lives in Manhattan.

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Pat.
1,311 reviews
October 24, 2024
Prolifically illustrated and with understandable explanations for us non-engineers. While reading, the theme song of Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying Machines kept running through my head. These are definitely the machines that went down-tiddly-down-down.
Profile Image for Abraham Ray.
2,149 reviews5 followers
May 1, 2015
nice book of weird planes & other flying object that didn't make it.
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews

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