Langley's Feat--and Folly
The Smithsonian Secretary assembled a devoted team, a remarkable engine and a plane that wouldn't fly
- By Edwards Park
- Smithsonian magazine, November 1997, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 4)
One of Manly's first tasks was to supervise the construction of a remarkable gasoline engine designed by a Hungarian immigrant in New York, Stephen Marius Balzer. Balzer had been a watchmaker at Tiffany's, then studied engineering at night school while working at a machine shop. Such industry had paid off in 1894, when New Yorkers gaped at the city's first homegrown automobile — built by Balzer. Now in the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History, it's a simple structure of sturdy pipe work with a small three-cylinder engine to spin the rear axle.
Balzer's engine, light yet powerful, had intrigued Langley. He contracted with Balzer for the world's first "aero engine" to power what he hoped would be the world's first manned airplane, already being built in a shop behind the Smithsonian Castle where the Enid A. Haupt Garden now delights the eye.
Trying to meet Langley's "desires" for less weight and more power, Balzer put together in New York the five-cylinder engine now displayed, with Manly's modifications, at Air and Space. It was originally a rotary, like his automobile engine had been: the entire engine turned around the driveshaft. But Balzer had a terrible time getting it to work properly, or to generate adequate horsepower. Manly helped him, encouraged him, nudged him and strove to get him more money. Langley shelled it out, mostly from a $50,000 grant from Congress, and fidgeted while Balzer fussed.
Time dragged on. Month after month passed. Manly's notes to Langley indicate the growing frustrations of the team. July 1899: "I am rather at a loss to explain how it is that one day Mr. Balzer thinks the present cylinders will work, and the next day he thinks that the engine will have to be rebuilt. . . ."
September 1899: "The engine for the great aerodrome is as yet unfinished, but Mr. Balzer promises to be ready with it by the 22nd of the present month. . . ."
June 1900: "The gasoline engine which was contracted for on the 12th of December, 1898, by Mr. Balzer can neither be accepted nor condemned at the present moment."
In that same letter, dated June 19, Manly agreed to "go abroad for a few weeks" with Langley to investigate alternatives. In Europe, engineers advised them against the rotary design. Lubrication, for instance, was a problem, for a rotating engine obviously throws oil away from its center. As the cylinders spin around, oil gathers at their outer ends.
Why, then, had the idea of a rotary appealed to the Langley team at all?
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Comments (1)
Between 1987 and 1995, I read the Smithsonian Magazine, a magazine that my father had subscibed to for many years. I read an article in one of the magazines, and it was about car planes, or automobile airplanes that were flying around the United States in the 1950s. I did not save the magazine and I wish that I had. The article went into great detail about how the carplanes were assembled for take-off and disassembled after landing. The assembly/disassembly would occur at airports. The interesting thing was that the cars were drivable from the airport.
The downfall of this transportation method, according to the article was that this form of transportation became unmanageable and I never, ever heard or read anything else about this. Was I tripping?????
Please respond if anyone knows anything about this. What was the real reason for the demise of the carplane and why wouldn't it be more of a practical method of transportation than an untralite?
Mark
Posted by Mark Prince on September 21,2010 | 01:09 AM