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  1. George Cayley's early helicopter design from "On Aerial Navigation," 1809. In his experiments, Cayley would first test his ideas with small models and then gradually progress to full-scale demonstrations. He also kept meticulous records of his observations. One of his first experiments as a young man was to build a small helicopter model. This ...

  2. Cayley made these drawings for a vertical take-off and landing aircraft in 1843. Although the design looks fanciful by modern standards, it has features that have appeared in successful heli- copters (the wide fanlike rotors resemble those used on the de Bothezat machine flown by the U.S. Army in 1922; the lateral side- by-side arrangement of the rotors is similar to the recordbreaking Focke ...

  3. Apparently independently, Cayley developed a rotor helicopter model in the 1790s, calling it his “Aerial Carriage”. Model of Sir George Caley’s “Aerial Carriage”, 1843. Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license. From 1810 onwards, Cayley was publishing his three part series On Aerial Navigation.

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  4. Cayley was a polymath who involved himself in various engineering ventures. His wide array of inventions ranged from self-righting lifeboats, tension-spoke wheels, and the "Universal Railway" to automatic signals for railway crossings, small-scale helicopters, and a prototypical internal combustion engine fuelled by gunpowder.

  5. George Cayley (1773-1857) was a relatively well to do baron, who lived on an estate in Yorkshire, England and is considered the "Father of Aviation". An educated man, Cayley spent his life working intensely on engineering, social, and political problems in England. However, the dominant interest of his life was heavier-than-air flight and in ...

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  7. www.century-of-flight.freeola.com › Aviation history › toSir George Cayley - Freeola

    George Cayley's early helicopter design from "On Aerial Navigation," 1809. In his experiments, Cayley would first test his ideas with small models and then gradually progress to full-scale demonstrations. He also kept meticulous records of his observations.

  8. Sir George Cayley. Born: United Kingdom. Primarily active in: United Kingdom. 1773 – 1857. Sir George Cayley, a baronet who had inherited farmlands in Yorkshire and Lincolnshire, unlike many of his contemporaries who devoted their life to the pursuit of leisure, occasioned by a generous annual stipend, he was an active participant in a group ...

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