By Dan Beard
Figs. 33-37.
The Funny Hargrave Kite.
In 1884 Mr. E. Douglass Archibald, of the Royal Meteorological Society, sent
up two diamond-shaped kites, one seven feet and the other four feet in diameter,
both attached to one string. These kites, like Ben Franklin's, were covered with
silk; they carried scientific instruments 2,200 feet into the air.
"Pshaw," said some Americans, "how is this for high?" and
they sent a tandem team of kites 6,000 feet up in the air; over a mile high!
That is kite flying! Why, if any one of the boys had been able to do such a
thing when the author was a lad flying kites on the banks of the Ohio River,
that boy would have achieved fame enough to satisfy even the vaulting ambition
of a young Ben Franklin. The writer's experiments had no scientific ends in
view; his mission was to introduce new shapes of kites and prove by experiment
that they would fly. He felt more pride in holding by main strength the heavy
hemp twine to which a six-foot, straddle-legged-man kite was attached than ever
was experienced by any, of those learned professors with their tandems of
tailless kites loaded with scientific instruments.
But all boys will be interested in Lawrence Hargrave's kites. This great
Australian inventor of flying machines wanted some sort of an apparatus from
which to send off his flying machine, and so he invented
The Strangest Kite Ever Made.
In appearance there is nothing to suggest a kite; but then this is not
surprising in a country where moles have the bills and feet of ducks and are
credited with laying eggs, where poll-parrots kill sheep, and where natives have
war clubs which when thrown at an enemy not only knock the enemy over but
immediately return to their owners' hands. If the inhabitants of such a country
fly kites we expect something unheard of in the kite line, and Lawrence
Hargrave's kites do not disappoint us.
Imagine two boxes with their sides removed and connected by rods and you have
the form of the Hargrave kite. Mr. Hargrave calls these boxes "cells,"
but you must not mind that any more than you do when Mr. Eddy, Mr. Woglom and
Professor Clayton call their kites "aero-planes." They mean all right
by it. After you grow up to man's estate and dignity, you too will be hunting up
out-of-the-way terms for common things. But now, while you are boys, be
charitable to the poor men and let them keep their dignity with big words, while
you use simpler ones which answer the purpose better.
Mr. J. B. Millet Tests its Qualities.
Mr. Millet spent three summers experimenting with the Malay or Eddy kite and
then constructed a Hargrave kite, and seems to be well satisfied with the action
of this double dry-goods box, for that is what it most resembles.
Mr. Millet, in comparing the Hargrave with the Holland, Malay, or Eddy in the
Aeronautical Annual, NO. 2,1896, says that "the Hargrave was the steadier,
the less likely to break or lose its shape in the air, and lifted much more per
square foot of lifting surface." He further says that it is a kite that can
be anchored in the wind and left there without fear of disaster. It will fly
steadily and not require constant mending or balancing.
It is evident a glance that the Hargrave kite must possess "rigidity, of
frame. It is also evident that this is a most difficult quality to be secured
without adding weight to the structure. Hence this kite is generally considered
as unfit for light winds.
How to Make a Hargrave Kite.
Take eight slender, stiff pieces of bamboo, what the inland boys know as
fishin' pole or cane. These sticks must be as evenly balanced as possible and
exactly the same length, eighteen inches and three-quarters long. Next cut six
sticks each eleven inches long and as nearly alike as possible. These are for
the middle uprights and end stretchers. Find the middle of each of your first
eight sticks and lash them together in pairs at their middle (Fig. 33 A). Use
waxed shoe-thread to bind the middle points together, and make the spread
between a and c just eleven inches. Notch the ends of the stick.
You now have four pairs of cross sticks neatly fastened together, and you
must take one of your eleven-inch uprights and bind it to the ends of two pairs
of cross sticks (Fig. 34 B). Take the other eleven-inch upright and fasten the
other two pairs of cross sticks in the same manner.
Next cut two "booms," "spines," or connecting-rods, also
of stiff bamboo, and let them each be thirty inches long, and like the two
uprights, as nearly alike as it is possible for you to select them. Now, with
your waxed thread, or shoe thread, bind the two booms over the ends of the
eleven-inch stretchers or uprights (Fig. 35 C). The boom must fit like the top
of a letter T over the stretchers, and be perfectly square, that is, at right
angles with the stretcher, b, d, Fig. 34 B.
Each end of the booms must protrude beyond the uprights five and one-half
inches, that is, the end b, k, the end d, l, the end m, b, and the end a, n,
must each be five and one-half inches long, which leaves nineteen inches between
b, b and d, d (Fig. 35 C). Bind the other four stretchers to the ends of the
sticks a, c, etc., as shown in Fig. 36 D. Now string the frame, so that all the
sticks (with the exception of the diagonal or cross sticks, Fig. 33 A) shall be,
as the boys say, perfectly square with each other or, more correctly speaking,
at right angles. Take an old paint-brush and a pot of hot glue, and paint all
the joints with glue.
The frame is now finished, and it only needs a cover. The frame should now
measure thirty inches in the longest dimension of the box or cell, eleven inches
in the height of the cell, and eleven inches in the breadth of the cell, that
is, 11 by 11 by 30 inches for each box or cell, and thirty inches for the length
of the two booms, and eight inches between the cells. Cover the kite with light,
strong cloth that will not stretch. Fit the cloth over the frame neatly, and sew
it on so as to form two boxes covered at the top, bottom, and ends. But the two
broad sides of each are left open
for the wind to whistle through. Hem all the raw edges of the cloth. On the
bottom boom, at or near the inside edge of the cloth cover, lash with waxed
thread a small brass ring for a belly-band (Fig- 37).
See Also:
Outdoor
Handy Book