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Main Site : News : Story
May 22, 2003
Space Daily
At Nellis Air Force Base, Las Vegas, Nev., the past and the present
will sit side-by-side providing a rare glimpse of aviation history as the USU
Wright Flyer will be flown and then parked next to the Air Force's newest fighter
jet, the F/A-22, on May 28.
In celebration of the 100th anniversary of powered flight, Utah
State University students and faculty, working with the Space Dynamics Laboratory,
designed and built the flyer using space-age materials, as if the Wright brothers
were designing their plane today.
Kevlar and graphite replaced the muslin and spruce used in the
original Flyer. These two composites are manufactured in Utah and used in space
shuttles, next-generation rockets and military aircraft. A Harley Davidson twin-cam
88B engine functions as USU's modern-day version of the engine originally built
by Charles Taylor for the Wright brothers.
After two years and over 10,000 hours of hard work from Utah
State engineering and aviation technology students and faculty, the USU Wright
Flyer has been tested and flown over 50 times. The futuristic flyer is more
stable than the original, but still preserves the look of the Wright brothers'
first plane.
The Flyer is scheduled to travel to the Inventing Flight Celebration
in Dayton, Ohio in July of 2003. President George W. Bush will be in attendance
as an honorary guest, and former Senator and Space Shuttle Astronaut Jake Garn
will be at the controls for the celebratory flight.
The U.S. Centennial Flight Commission has designated the USU
Wright Flyer project as an official centennial event. It has also gained the
attention of national media with spotlights to be featured on the Learning Channel
and the History Channel in 2003.
The celebration of powered flight will give the residents of
Nevada an opportunity to reflect on the past and compare it to the future.
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