pinehilljoe
Staff Sergeant
- 878
- May 1, 2016
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I don't think that the Wright's dropping out of the development of powered flight would have had such a disastrous effect on early aviation. A delay? possibly. 20-30 years? no chance, maybe a year or two, probably less.
It's not like the Wrights were working on an original idea and they were certainly not the only ones working on it.
Cheers
Steve
I think the Wrights deserve a great deal of credit, largely for the reasons you give, but I still reckon that someone else would have got there sooner rather than later.
I would draw an analogy with a nuclear weapon! Any A level physics or chemistry student knows how they work, but that's a long way from actually building one
Cheers
Steve
I doubt it, the important thing was engines and propellers which the Wright brothers commissioned or made themselves. People were working on them all over particularly France. Bleriot crossed the channel six years after the Wright flyer first flew in a design that owes little to the flyer. It was a different era, people routinely did die pioneering aviation even before the Wrights flew.Not as far fetched as one might think. If Orvile or Wilbur had an accident on the way to Kittyhawk, or one crashed and died in the early glider tests and the other got discouraged and gave up, it might have set back the invention of the airplane by 20 or 30+ years. The butterfly affect.
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I doubt it, the important thing was engines and propellers which the Wright brothers commissioned or made themselves. People were working on them all over particularly France. Bleriot crossed the channel six years after the Wright flyer first flew in a design that owes little to the flyer. It was a different era, people routinely did die pioneering aviation even before the Wrights flew.
An excellent question. And the answer is that if the political situation had been the same in this scenario with the same players as in reality, there would have been no different end result.
However, there would have been one significant difference: far fewer civilian deaths. In WW1 only some 5 % of all direct deaths from military action were civilians. In WW2 it was some 50 %. There are two key factors in this: ideology and air power. I know that some air power fans will be furious of the following statement, but it is fact: air power is far better in killing civilians than military personnel. All major WW2 air forces were responsible for more civilian KIA than military KIA. Excepting possibly the Soviet AF. And then smaller air arms. But especially the R.A.F. and the U.S. air forces record in this is clear. The previus statement is true even today. Air power excels in attacking civilians.
So, a WW2 without air power would have greatly reduced civilian suffering.
I think the Wright's genius was realizing the need and inventing a way to control the plane in all three axis. Wing warping was the breakthrough that no other pioneer thought of at the time. Even the Bleriot XI copied wing warping, albeit with a different form of pilot control.
There is no question of powered, controlled flight being developed at some point along the way, but the question is how confidant are the is the military in it's usefulness?
Like I mentioned in the original post, military leaders were not really impressed with the aircraft's value at the onset of WWI and so it remained almost a novelty during the early years. There was also the constant bickering between the Army and Navy regarding airpower. A classic example of that, would be the can of worms that Billy Mitchell opened when he demonstrated aerial bombing of Warships.
There were several instances in military history, where new inventions changed the face of warfare, like the U.S. Civil War for example, that saw many innovations that were a herald of things to come like Ironclads, Submarines, rail-mobile artillery, aerial observation complete with real-time communication and so on.
But all these innovations were dependent on the inventors not only being successful in their attempts, but also successful in promoting their idea to the military.
There is no question that the Wrights and others were on the fast-track to creating controlled, powered flight but these were the successful few out of the many aviation pioneers who failed along the way.
So basically no air operations up to the high water mark of the penetration. Original point, the War could have still been a mobile war without the aid of air power. Mechanization was the key factor to alleviate the static war, not air power alone.The weather was terrible, but the Luftwaffe did undertake some operations. Peiper's unit was re-supplied on 22nd December, though most of the supplies were not recovered. The Luftwaffe refused requests from 6th Panzer Army for similar operations. Other operations were carried out when they should have been abandoned, the drop of von der Heydte paratroops on 16th December would be a good example of such an operation. Given conditions it was always a guaranteed fiasco, Heydte only managed to assemble 150 men and retrieved just 8 of the 500 panzerfausts dropped!
Cheers
Steve