n7axw wrote:
Probably not true. Wrights did a lot of their experimenting with kites. Also they studied birds and developed a wind tunnel. Their efforts were accomplished without modern precision and often fell into the category of the intuitive. All of it was eventually refined as time went on. But as crude as it was, they were successful in launching the first powered controlled flight.
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One of the primary reasons the Wright brothers made the wind tunnel was the discovery that the commonly published tables of aerodynamic performance of various shapes were wrong. The wind tunnel allowed them to test and generate correct - that is, accurate - data for a variety of shapes. Their measurements were, for the day, very precise and correct due to their fanatical attention to detail.
The incorrect information about aerodynamics is probably why a number of better funded competitors were so far behind them. It simply did not occur to the competitors that published data from highly esteemed researchers could be so far off. Also, some of their competitors were more intuitive, seat of the pants types. But the Wright brothers themselves were very methodical, researching what was known and discovered by others to create their initial designs, then performing detailed analysis of the failures - hence their discovery that the published data was wrong.
As an example of just how careful they were, one of the brothers (I forget which one) did a detailed analysis of the airflow around the propeller as he designed it. His diary recorded that he found the problem extremely challenging, but kept at the equations until he had a solution, and designed a propeller whose efficiency was not exceeded until the advent of modern computational systems, and which matches well in efficiency with many commercial propellers today.
They used science and mathematics - along with superior engineering talent - in every aspect of their work on aircraft.