Page:Aerial Flight - Volume 1 - Aerodynamics - Frederick Lanchester - 1906.djvu/441

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APPENDIX.
App. IV.

In this instance the species of bird was not identified. This proportion means that the reaction sustained by the wings when in action is approximately four times the weight of the bird, on which computation the flight velocity should be about twice that proper to the actual weight and wing area measurement.[1]

It is difficult to assess accurately the speed of flight of a bird under any circumstances, and most of all under the conditions now under discussion. Travelling at somewhat over thirty miles

Fig. 162.

per hour on a motor vehicle, it is not an uncommon sight to see a pied wagtail or other small bird endeavouring to escape directly ahead by adopting the mode of flight under discussion. When hard pressed in this way the wagtail flies low, and its motion closely resembles the bouncing of an india-rubber ball on the

  1. It has already been pointed out (§ 187) that the problem is in all likelihood modified by the conditions of active flight, so that the tabulated figures, which relate to the gliding mode, may require to be multiplied by some unknown coefficient. In all probability the velocity of least resistance for a given bird in active flight is somewhere about 20 per cent. greater than for the gliding or soaring mode.

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