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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Victor_TatinVictor Tatin - Wikipedia

    Victor Tatin (1843–1913) was a French engineer who created an early airplane, the Aéroplane, in 1879. The craft was the first model airplane to take off using its own power after a run on the ground.

    • 1843, Paris
    • French
    • 18 April 1913
    • Aeronautical inventor and engineer
  2. Victor Tatin (1843-1913) Frenchman, Victor Tatin became one of early aviation's most authoritative theorists. He built a model in 1879 with a fuselage that acted as a tank for the compressed air that drove a small engine linked to two tractor propellers. The model had a 75ins (1.9m) wingspan.

  3. Mar 12, 2023 · One such man was a French national by the name of Victor Tatin. Back in 1879, Tatin constructed a model airplane approximately two meters long (6 ft 3 in) and weighing around 1.8 kilos (4 lbs)...

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    In 1879, the French engineer Victor Tatin created an early airplane that was powered by a compressed-air engine. His flying machine is noteworthy for being the first airplane to take off using its own power after a run on the ground. It was flown tethered to a central pole on a circular track at the military facilities of Chalais-Meudon.

  5. Oct 11, 2021 · One of those pioneers who have impacted aviation industry to a great extent was Victor Tatin, the French engineer who made the “Aéroplane” in the early days of flight. In this blog post we are going to explore the life and accomplishments of this great aviation theorist.

  6. www.century-of-flight.freeola.com › Aviation history › toVictor Tatin - Freeola

    Victor Tatin (1843-1913) Victor Tatin. F renchman, Victor Tatin became one of early aviation's most authoritative theorists. He built a model in 1879 with a fuselage that acted as a tank for the compressed air that drove a small engine linked to two tractor propellers. The model had a 75ins (1.9m) wingspan.

  7. Aug 21, 2011 · Control Line (CL) model aviation can trace its roots back to the early tethered experiments of Victor Tatin, whose compressed-air powered model was flown round-the-pole in 1879. In the 1920s and 1930s aeromodelers began to take this a step further and actually try and control their whip and powered aircraft in flight.

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