A Man with Wings: The Classification and Brief History of
Aircrafts
By definition, an aircraft is a structure capable of carrying
its weight and travel through air by the means of support from
its own buoyancy or the dynamic action of the air against its
surfaces. Aircrafts have been of great interest to anyone
because man has always been fascinated with flying. With this
great desire to soar the sky, there have been a number of
attempts to build contraptions that will bring them closer to
this goal.
>From the moment Leonardo da Vinci, a great inventor and artist,
wrote his vision of an aircraft in his notebooks, it was evident
that man was determined to fly and build the contraption that
will bring him closer to the sky.
There had not been few but several noted and documented attempts
to build the world's first functioning aircraft. Unfortunately
most of the aircrafts designed and build did not even make it on
air. The honor of being the first persons to put a
heavier-than-air aircraft on flight goes to the brothers Wilbur
and Orville Wright.
The Wright Brother's aircraft had a wingspan of 12 m (40 ft) and
weighed 340 kg (750 lb) including the pilot. As the two brothers
took turns in flying the plane, Wilbur, in the last of the
flights, stayed in the air for 59 seconds and traveled 260 m
(852 ft) at speeds a little under 16 km/h (10 mph).
In December 17, 1903, the message "Sent from Kitty Hawk, North
Carolina, after having successfully completed the world's first
powered flights" by Wilbur Wright and Orville Wright confirmed
their success of putting their aircraft design on flight.
>From then on, several modifications and alterations of the
Wright Brother's original aircraft design were developed.
As of present, there are two main categories of aircrafts -
heavier-than-air or aerodynes and lighter-than-air or aerostats.
Examples of aircrafts that are classified under heavier than air
are helicopters and fixed-wing aircrafts such as airplanes. For
fixed-wing aircrafts to fly it must have an engine that is
motorized by the expansion of hot combustible products of fuel
directly acting on the engine. With this power coming from the
aircraft's engine, the aircraft will then be accelerated at a
very high speed while it moves it into the air.
However, there are some exceptions for this classification of
heavier-than-air aircrafts. Some heavier-than-air aircrafts do
not have engines such as the glider. To get ready for flight, a
glider gains its thrust from winches (or machines that wind up
ropes), gravity and thermal currents.
Lighter-than-air aircrafts utilize buoyancy or the upward force
of an object immersed in air or gas. To be buoyant,
lighter-than-air aircrafts such as hot air balloons and airships
uses dense gases such as helium and hydrogen or hydrogen to move
the air around the aircraft.
Further classifications of aircrafts depend on its usage.
Military aircrafts such as combat planes and fighter planes used
for reconnaissance and surveillance is one category of aircrafts
based on usage.
These types of aircrafts are not just widely used for national
security nowadays but had been of great use during the World
Wars. It is in World War I when bombers, or aircrafts mainly
utilized to attack enemy vehicles, ships and aircrafts were
first designed and employed.
In World War II, tankers, or aircrafts designed to refuel other
aircrafts in mid-flight were used to increase fighter planes'
operational efficiency.
Commercial planes, private jets, carrier aircrafts, recreational
hot air balloon flights and general aviation aircrafts are
categorized under civilian aviation. This category comprises the
vast majority of the aircrafts that set flight everyday and is
the most common and well-know category of aircrafts.
Both civilian and military aircrafts are sub-classified into
further categories.
When Henry David Thoreau, a famous American writer, said "Thank
God men cannot as yet fly and lay waste the sky as well as the
earth", he may have been right at some points. However, without
the advancement in this technology, we may have not experienced
the convenience of flying and the thrill of being up in the air.