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1. The following questions have been extracted from pre-production notes on the video documentary 'A Wing and a Prayer' by Dr How (DH).
Note added later: As a Time Lord there is SO much to remember and I've added some questions here on details I need to check...
DH: I clearly need to start this documentary by informing the viewers what it is about. I need a talking head (expert) but can't let him go on too long or viewers will switch off! The doco is about the early development of powered flight by winged aircraft prior to 1920. I'll ask my friend Professor Avi Ashon to explain the simple term used for such flights. If only I could remember the name...
2. DH: One of the advantages of being a Time Lord is that I can take the TARDIS to any period in history and collect live video footage. I'm sure even the network executives would find that pretty compelling. I do want to dispel the misconception that powered flight was first considered late in the second millennium CE. Hence I'm off to Italy in 1505 to interview a true genius of humankind. This man apparently designed a helicopter as well as drawing 'Vitruvian Man' and he did some painting too.
Later note: What a shame he didn't want to be interviewed until he understood everything about time travel and video recording. My shooting schedule is simply too tight. I'll just have to show high quality images of his sketches instead. But what name should be added to the caption?
3. DH: Prof Ashon suggests I now interview one of the scientists, Lawrence Hargrave, working on wing design as a more viewer-friendly way of explaining how aeroplanes can fly. Apparently he found that a curved wing surface had twice the lift as a flat surface. I was looking forward to this interview as Mr Hargrave was born in Greenwich. However when I met him, I could barely understand his explanations of lower air pressure above the wing than below it allowing greater lift, even when he generously shared all his experimental findings with me, including designs for a rotary engine to power flight. It wasn't the science that was the problem, it was his accent - it was so nasal! But where was he from? I THINK he said something like 'south wales'. But I was so far from Cardiff! Perhaps I can add subtitles to the interview...
4. DH: Of course, everyone expects to hear about the famous Wright Brothers and their powered flight at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina on December 1903. I can do much better than other documentaries as I have not only managed to interview a very pleasant Orville Wright, but have captured footage of the Wright Flyer on all four flights that day. The last trip flight lasted 59 seconds and traversed 852 feet. This will surely interest the networks! One small problem though, how can I describe this aeroplane?
5. DH: During my interview with Orville Wright, I asked him a question that has puzzled me for ages "You and your brother are from Dayton Ohio, so why are you conducting your flying trials at Kitty Hawk?" At that stage a big gust of wind picked up the plane and blew it end-over-end, causing major damage and even more importantly, I only half-listened to his answer. I do recall it made a lot of sense though. I'm pretty sure he said...
6. DH: Time to stir things up a little! I hadn't realized until told by my researcher Dr Con Flix, that for many years the Wright Brothers were not awarded the honour of performing the first controlled, sustained, powered flight. Instead this honor was given to American physicist and aviation pioneer, Samuel Pierpont Langley for his catapult-based flights over the Potomac River earlier in 1903. I must find out more about this man as I hadn't heard of his exploits even though he was also the secretary of the organisation that later gave credit for aviation feats as well as allowing the public to freely view many of these early aircraft. "Dr Flix, what institution is this?"
7. DH: I enjoy France so much I must include a Frenchman in my documentary! So I started filming on July 25, 1909 as a pilot took off just after sunrise. I followed him to his landing thirty six and a half minutes later in Dover, marking the first successful crossing of the English Channel in an aeroplane. With such with an impressive handle-bar moustache, I can't believe I've forgotten his name. What was it again?
8. DH: I really wanted to avoid war when I'm on a blessed break in my own peace-keeping activities, but I can't ignore the role of the 'Great War' in the development of aircraft technology. Early in the war, planes were used solely for spotting, but they soon became fighting machines - dropping bombs, strafing and engaging in dog-fights in the sky. The allied fighter planes were initially superior, but Prof Ashon mentioned a particular development in the Fokker E.1 that gave it and the German airforce a major advantage. Fortunately for the Allies, they soon caught on. But what was Avi talking about? (I really should have paid more attention!)
9. DH: As homage to my British (BBC) heritage, it is only fitting that my last video footage captures two British aviators, John Alcock and Arthur Whitten Brown. Making new use of an ex-World War I Vickers Vimy bomber, they collected some mail and took to the air in June 1919. They said they will be flying for ages and I don't really want to simply follow them the whole way. Instead, I asked them to write down their destination so I can easily film the arrival. But I can't read the handwriting! I wonder what they are trying to achieve?
10. DH: After all the spectacular video of flying machines and intrepid aviators, I think I should finish with some closing remarks from Prof Avi Ashon.
AA: So many young men in the first two decades of the twentieth century, some famous and some now forgotten, lost their lives due to their love of flying. Aside from those horrific war injuries, one single force was responsible for a very large percentage of these deaths. Of course I'm referring to... (blank screen)
DH: Oh no! The videofile has become corrupted! I wish I knew what this single force was. I know from Avi's notes that it is one of the following options, but which one?
Source: Author
MikeMaster99
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stedman before going online.
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