Flying and Accidents During and Between the Two Wars
- 1 June 1969
- journal article
- historical group
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in The Aeronautical Journal
- Vol. 73 (707) , 941-949
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0001924000051356
Abstract
I learned to fly at Brooklands in the early summer of 1915, in a Maurice Farman Longhorn with a 70 hp Renault engine. Failure to take the Royal Aero Club ticket would have cost £75, but I was lucky and passed the tests in two hours and ten minutes, spread over about three weeks—no flying if it was even slightly bumpy or more than about a 15 mph wind. One had to make two figures of eight at not under 1000 ft and then land in the 50 yds circle with engine off. The sewage farm in the corner of the aerodrome, close to the railway, had a specially magnetic charm for some people, and I happily did not make that mistake.Keywords
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