Aerial Navigation surveys the milestones and hurdles in early flight, from balloons to the promise of aeroplanes.
This nonfiction work traces what early researchers believed was possible in navigating the air. It weighs the practical limits of lighter‑than‑air craft, the search for lighter motors, and the evolving ideas about how to achieve automatic stability, safe takeoffs, and practical speeds.
The book also contrasts rival paths in aviation, from wind‑driven balloons to winged machines, and examines how theory, experiment, and engineering balance to push the frontiers of flight.
- Learn how speed, stability, and power shaped progress in navigable balloons.
- Understand the practical challenges of scaling up airships and the quest for light, efficient motors.
- Explore the competing schools of aviation theory and the move toward mechanical flight.
- See why researchers believed staged improvements and cross‑discipline collaboration were essential.
Ideal for readers seeking a clear, factual overview of the early aviation era and its persistent questions.