Nulli Secundus I RAE-O526 during World War I

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Nulli Secundus I RAE-O526 during World War I

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Summary

Aviation in Britain Before the First World War
Nulli Secundus I, in a balloon shed with its doors open. The propellers are turning and Cody can be seen attending to the engine. It looks as if the engine and propellers has been detached from the airship envelope. Cody was responsible for the design of the nacelle and spar frame that attached the nacelle to the airship envelope and kept the latter rigid. The construction of the frame from hickory, spruce and bamboo followed similar lines to the methods used for his kites and gliders.
It was in this airship that Cody and Colonel Capper of the Balloon School at Aldershot made their record breaking flight from Farnborough to London The journey of 40 miles took three hours twenty five minutes and included circling St Paul's Cathedral. It finished at the cycle stadium next to Crystal Palace. At the time this was a world record for a non-rigid airship.

Colonel Capper was instrumental in the War Office deciding to use Cody's man carrying kites and appointing him as instructor. After this their relationship soured, due partly to Capper's bias towards airships rather than aeroplanes and his support of a rival aviator John Dunne. Cody's none military attitude also caused a certain amount of friction between the two of them. Their relationship did however remain cordial, and on 15th August 1909 in the mark IC, piloted by Cody, Capper became the first passenger to be carried by an aircraft in Britain.

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Date

1907
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Source

Royal collection of the United Kingdom
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Public Domain

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1907 in aviation in the united kingdom
1907 in aviation in the united kingdom