Was Santos Dumont the real father of flight?

Discuss.
I'm brazilian so i'm biased, but yes, i do believe that he's the father of flight.

No.

No. You'd have to be an idiot to think he was. His first powered heavier than air flight took place several years after the Wright brothers did it at Kittyhawk.

The argument is that while Dumont did it on his own the brothers used ways to give the plane enough speed to fly.
Here on Brazil we are teached that he was the father of flight exactly because of that, might be nationalism but eh...
Yeah, people always forget based Leo.

how did this eyesore could fly?
posting just for meme potential

It's nationalism propaganda as is acustomed to Brazilian education

No. The person who came closest to beating the Wright brothers was a Frenchman.

the real father of flight was an AUSTRALIAN

WE WUZ AIRPLANE INVENTORS AN SHIEEEET

The fathers of flight were the Montgolfier brothers. If we're talking about heavier-than-air flight, it was an incremental invention, with several inventors each make breakthroughs. I'd say the most important ones were:

- Félix du Temple
- Jean-Marie Le Bris
- Alphonse Pénaud
- Clément Ader
- Alberto Santos-Dumont
- Gabriel Voisin

Alberto Santo-Dumont is the first to have publicly demonstrated a controlled and sustained self-powered airplane flight with autonomous takeoff. That's also what the Wright brothers claim to have done before him, though that claim is undocumented.

Alberto Santos-Dumont was franco-brazilian.

Basically this.
Also, you have to understand american education is biased. Most people who visit this site are american.

That's about as French as a Howler monkey born in a Paris zoo.

lmao racism
literally no one gives a fuck about fucking france, maybe terrorists

>I'm brazilian so i'm biased, but yes, i do believe that he's the father of flight.
The wright brothers undertook a 40 minute powered flight that went like 24 miles before he ever took to the air. So he can be your father of flight all you want but you're wrong.

>That's also what the Wright brothers claim to have done before him, though that claim is undocumented.
>undocumented
k

As opposed to BR education?

>Richard William Pearse (3 December 1877 – 29 July 1953) was a New Zealand farmer and inventor who performed pioneering experiments in aviation.

>It is claimed Pearse flew and landed a powered heavier-than-air machine on 31 March 1903, some nine months before the Wright brothers flew their aircraft.

I don't think it's racism, he was born in Brazil and didn't move to France until he was an adult. Although his family WAS ethnically French on his father's side.

>a kiwi was the first to fly

The Wright flyer first flew in 1903. Santos-Dumont didn't even start working on airplanes until 1905.

The only reason that there is any confusion on this is because of the rules set out by Fédération Aéronautique Internationale, which was started in Paris in 1905, two years after the Wright brothers' flight. They decided to include in their rules that the plane had to take off without assistance. The Wrights designed their plane to land on skids instead of wheels. Since it didn't have wheels, they would set their plane on a dolly on a track. FAI decided this didn't count, and said that Santos-Dumont's flight of the 14-bis in 1906 was the first, since it had wheels and didn't use a track to take off. This is one of a few cases where the generally accepted record holder is not the same as the name the FAI claimed. Another example of this is that the FAI didn't initially accept Yuri Gagarin as the first man in space because he ejected before his spacecraft landed. In both of these cases, the FAI did eventually come around and acknowledge the Wright brothers and Gagarin for their accomplishments.

And as for Richard Pearse, the problem with the claims about him are lack of evidence and conflicting reports. Namely, Pearse himself said he didn't attempt anything practical until 1904, and didn't have a successful flight until 1909

Yes he was.

What the Wright brothers did was pretty much a glider.

Literally only BR's believe Dumont was the first to fly though.

>Flew for 1 hour after taking off.
>Glider
Want to know how I how I know you don't know anything about Aeronautics?

See "Forgotten Silver".

He was a pioneer of Aeronautics, but was more interested in dirigibles than planes.

The father of flight was a turk, he made the first rocket and the first parachute