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![]() "Ron Wanttaja" wrote in message ... On 23 Jun 2004 09:59:41 -0700, (Corrie) wrote: Ron Wanttaja wrote in message . .. It took about forty years from the date the first government-sponsored manned aerospacecraft left the atmosphere and glided down to a safe landing in the California desert to the successful flight of the first private one. If the same timescale was used for conventional airplanes, the first privately-owned aircraft would have flown in 1943. As opposed to 1903? The first airplane WAS privately-owned. Not to mention amateur-built. The government-funded program wound up in the Potomac. ;-) Sure, I know the Wrights were private, it was just a way to make a comparison. Interesting to note that the Wrights attempted to use lawsuits to deter those who wished to duplicate their feat; in retrospect, the desire for the technology overcame the legal issues involved. Ron Wanttaja Well, strictly speaking, they used lawsuits to force other people to pay for profiting from the use of their ideas. They gave permission for the use of their patented system in experimental work. They were perfectly willing to license their technology, but other manufacturers wanted to use it, both for manufacturing airplanes and doing exhibitions, without paying for it. There was a lot of suing, in all directions -- and thus the "patent pool" solution of 1917, when the government wanted to start letting contracts for airplanes without having to worry about who was suing whom. The longest-running suit, which at least had the beneficial side-effect of getting Orville to write and testify about how he and Wilbur developed the airplane, was filed _against_ the Wright-Martin Aircraft Company (owner of the Wright patents and to whom Orville was just a consultant at that point) and the U.S . government by the heirs of John Montgomery. It was filed on the basis of a 1905 patent by Montgomery covering the use of parabolic curves as airfoils. The Wrights didn't use parabolic curves as airfoils, but I guess you can always file a suit. The heirs eventually lost in 1928. Tim Ward |
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