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Aeronautical Events in 1924: World Tours, World Records, and Milestone Achievements

Introduction

1921 1922 1923  1924  1925 1926 1927

1890 1900 1910  1920  1930 1940 1950

19th century 20th century 21st century

1st millennium 2nd millennium 3rd millennium

Monthly timeline:
Jan – Feb – Mar – Apr – May – June
Jul – Aug – Sep – Oct – Nov – Dec

Thematic timelines:
Aeronautics (Aeronautics includes the sciences and technologies aimed at building and…) • Architecture (Architecture can be defined as the art of constructing buildings.) • Automobile (An automobile, or car, is a terrestrial vehicle propelling itself using a…) • Band drawn • Railroads (Iron is a chemical element, symbol Fe and atomic number 26. It’s …) • Cinema (We call cinema a visual projection in motion, most often with sound. The term. ..) • Disney • Law • Economics • Football • Literature • Music • Classical music • Amusement parks • Photography • Health (Health is a state of complete physical, mental and social well-being, and is not… ) and medicine (Medicine (from the Latin medicus, “healing”) is science and…) • Science (Science (Latin scientia, “knowledge”) is, according to the dictionary…) • Sociology • Sport • Theater •

Calendars:
Roman • Chinese • Gregorian • Hebrew • Hindu • Muslim • Persian • Republican

Aeronautical timeline

1923 in aeronautics – 1924 in aeronautics – 1925 in aeronautics

Events

Airlines in Europe (Europe is a land region which can be considered as a…) in 1924 January 16: Helicopter tests at Issy-les-Moulineaux (A helicopter is a rotary-wing aircraft whose or the rotors…) pure of the Marquis Pateras Pescara (Pescara is a city of 120,000 inhabitants, at the center of a metropolitan area of ​​400,000…) (1890 -1966) on behalf of the French STAé: Une distance 1,160m; The kilometer is crossed. January 21: Tests in Issy-les-Moulineaux by the Argentinian Raul Pateras Pescara de Castelluccio on a helicopter of his own invention. 1st attempt: 500 m, turn, 124 m and landing; 2nd attempt: 500 m, turn, 110 m and landing (Landing designates, in the etymological sense, the fact of reaching solid ground….). 29 January: New tests at Issy-les-Moulineaux by the Marquis Pateras Pescara Raul Pateras Pescara de Castelluccio on his pure helicopter. 1st attempt: 500 m, turn, 60 m and landing; 2nd attempt: 500 m, turn, 210 m and landing. February 21: First flight (The first flight or maiden flight of an aircraft is the first opportunity for it to take…) postal in Alaska (Fairbanks – McGrath) March 17 to September 28: Under the command of Major Martin , four US Army Air Douglas DWC (Air is the mixture of gases that make up the Earth’s atmosphere. It is odorless and…) Service leave Seattle for a world tour (The word world can designate: ) by air with stopovers. Two of these aircraft, the Chicago and the New Orleans, managed to complete the course by landing in Seattle on the following September 28 after 371 hours and 11 minutes of flight. This world tour includes, in particular, the first crossing of the North Atlantic (North is a cardinal point, opposite to south.) in the sense (SENS (Strategies for Engineered Negligible Senescence) is a scientific project which aims. ..) West-East with stopovers (4 aircraft plus an Italian aircraft, but the latter sank at sea (The term sea covers several realities.) and the crew was miraculously saved) and the first crossing of the Pacific with stopovers (3 devices). April 1: Foundation of the airline (An airline is an air transport company that carries …) British Imperial Airways by merger (In physics and metallurgy, merger is the passage of a state body solid towards the state…) of several small companies. April 15: First official record for helicopters: Frenchman Étienne Oehmichen signs a 360 m flight with his flying laboratory n°2 which does not meet the definition (A definition is a speech that says what a thing or what does a name mean. Hence the …) of the word helicopter found in the 1924 Larousse. FAI May 4: The first flight of 1 kilometer in a triangular closed circuit for a helicopter is carried out by Étienne Oehmichen at Valentigney (Doubs). His flying laboratory aircraft n°2 is not a pure helicopter. June 23: The French pilot Saadi Lecointre breaks the world speed record (We distinguish:) over 500 km (306.696 km/h) and wins the “Coupe Beaumont”. June 23: The American pilot Russell L. Maugham crosses (A crossbar is a fundamental element of the railroad track. It’s a piece laid across…) the United States from East to West (West is a cardinal point, opposite to East. This is the direction towards which…) (New York – San Francisco) on a Curtiss PW8 in less than 21 hours (The hour is a unit of measurement:) and 48 minutes (Primary form of a document: Right: one minute is the original of one act. …) with five refueling stops. July 1: Inauguration of a transcontinental postal service (Coast-to-coast) in the United States by the US Post Office. July 1: First flight of the de Havilland (de Havilland Aircraft Company is a British aircraft manufacturer founded in 1920…) DH.51. July 16: The French crew Coupet and Drouin beat the world record for flight time (37 hours, 59 minutes and 10 seconds) on a “Farman”. October 1 to November 24: A Dutch crew connects Amsterdam and Batavia on a Fokker D VII, a journey of 15,900 km over 56 days (The day or the day is the interval which separates sunrise from sunset; it est la…), including 20 of vol. October 10: Altitude record (Altitude is the vertical elevation of a place or an object in relation to a level…) for the French pilot Callizo on a Gourdou-Lesseure: 12,066 m. September 7: First flight of the Dornier (The Dornier company (Dornier Flugzeugwerke) is a German construction company…) Komet III. November: Connection Paris (Paris is a French city, capital of France and the capital of the region…) – Moscow () – Vienna by the French airline CIDNA (International Navigation Company (Navigation is science and all the techniques that allow aerial :)). November 4: First flight of the seaplane (A seaplane designates an aircraft with the ability to land (land) or take off…) Canadian Vickers (Vickers, originally founded as the Vickers Company in 1828, was a British manufacturer.. .) Heading. December 11: The French driver Bonnet breaks the pure speed world record: 448.170 km/h. December 13: First flight of the American NM-1 plane (An airplane, according to the official definition of the International Civil Aviation Organization…), everything (The whole understood as the whole of what exists is often interpreted like the world or…) metal (A metal is a chemical element that can lose electrons to form…).
2023-07-13 03:35:13


#Aeronautics #Definition #Explanations

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