Especialidades JA/Cometas/Respuestas
Cometas | ||
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Asociación General
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Destreza: 1 Año de introducción: 1986 |
Requisitos
La especialidad de Cometas es un componente de la Maestría Recreación. |
1
2
Kites are used today for the following:
- Predicting weather (carrying aloft meteorological instruments).
- Carrying loads of water ?
- Spaceflight (during the recovery of space vehicles)
- Pulling ships at sea
- Recreation (kite surfing and skateboarding)
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4
4a
4b
4c
4d
4e
4f
4g
4h
4i
4j
4k
4l
5
- Lack of wind.
- Too strong a wind.
- Trees or other obstacles causing turbulence.
- Essential parts of the kite or line breaking (e.g., too powerful a wind can break spars or the kite string).
6
The usual causes of a kite looping are:
- Not enough di-hedral.
- Poorly bridled.
- Poorly balanced.
- Too much wind.
If the kite starts to misbehave when already aloft the problem is most likely to be too much wind. Release tension on the line and try to pull the kite diagonally out of the wind-window and closer to you. The closer you have it, the more control of it you will have too. Most importantly you must keep the kite under your control.
7
A kite's tail is used to add stability to the kite and keep it facing into the wind. If there is enough di-hedral this will then prevent the kite from looping. The length of a tail should be from six to nine times the length of the kite body. Some put them on the kite so that when in the air it will wave along the wind - for decoration.
8
9
9a
9b
10
Here are several links to making different types of kites. Go have fun!
10a
The sled kite was invented and patented by the American, William Allison in the 1950s. This kite helped pave the way for a class of kites known as "semi-rigid."
10b
Note: There is no such thing a "stable, flying, flat kite." The nearest thing to this is probably the "Indian fighter kite" as it is flat until on the wind. It is a single line kite and is allowed to rotate and float down wind, until it is pointing in the desired direction. At this time the line is pulled tight and the bridle pulls the spine forward into the wind and the kite then assumes its dihedral, stops rotating and leaps forward under the pilot's control. The profile of this kite is almost square while the two-stick frame lies on a flat plane, with the flexible cross spar (complete with both ends tapered) is bent backwards towards the tail end. Traditionally, the covering of this kite is tissue paper but more recently for the western market is made with mylar or similar thin plastic.
Another kite which qualifies for the term "flat" is the Delta kite, made with, or without a spine. It depends for its stability on the pull of the line on its bridle shaped keel to deform the sail and give it its dihedral. We do not know when it was invented, but it is a possible contender for Benjamin Franklin's flat kite. Its one fault is that it has a tendency to fly directly over the head of the pilot, and beyond. This fault is cured by the addition of a tail or a drogue.
10c
Diamond kites (see Eddy kites, but distinguish). Diamonds types appear from mini to very large, from low-cost beginner utility to high quality state-of-the art large target control diamonds.
The classic Diamond is also a flat kite until on the wind, but here the dihedral is forced onto the cross spar by the air flow. The cross spar lies at ninety degrees to the spine, and is spaced between one fifth and a quarter of the distance from the nose. The addition of a tail (of from six to nine times the body length) compels the kite to face into the wind.
- http://www.skratch-pad.com/kites/make.html
- http://www.diynetwork.com/diy/hobbies/article/0,2033,DIY_13951_2273218,00.html
10d
See the earlier note under "Flat kites" as the Delta wing is flat until on the wind. As with most kites, the more accurately one half of the flying surface reflects the other, the easier it is to get it to fly true. The Delta is named after the Greek letter which it resembles in shape, if constructed without a spine. If a spine is added the profile can be altered to achieve the shape designer wishes.
By adding yet another spine and another keel, plus a strip of material between the kite is now called Delta Conyne.
- External Site to make Delta Conyne Wing Kite - http://www.kitemonger.com/kiteplan/sbd/index.html
10e
The Malay kite is a model of tailless kite. First introduced to the West in a New York newspaper article from October 1894, the Malay kite was used for recreation for centuries before this in parts of the Far East. The article detailed how a university professor ("Clayton") had erected a series of kites and bound them all together to one kite. These kites had no tail, were bowed and diamond shaped, and were referred to by the article writer as "Malay kites". However, the existence of a Malay-like design may have already been heard of in the United States sometime before the publishing of the article; in the last edition of the American Boy's Handy Book, another tailless kite is described (there referred to as a "Holland" kite). The description of this kite, which was to be included as a chapter in the book, was sent in to the author sometime around 1882, eleven years before the Malay kite was mentioned in the newspaper. Note:- to make the 'Malay' or 'Eddy' kite fly "tail less" dihedral is applied to the kite by fitting a bowline to the cross spar in like manner to that used on the Eddo, Korean, and Rocacoo. The pre-application of bow onto the cross spar is the main difference between the classic diamond and the Eddy. The other difference is that the bow enables the Eddy to fly without a tail. which the classic 'Diamond' requires.
10f
A box kite is a high-performance kite, noted for developing relatively high lift. The typical design has four parallel struts. The box is made rigid with diagonal crossed struts. There are two sails, or ribbons, whose width is about a quarter to one third of the length of the box. The ribbons wrap around the ends of the box, leaving the ends and middle of the kite open. In flight, one strut is the bottom, and the bridle is tied between the top and bottom of this strut. The dihedrals of the sails help stability. Note:- The central gap between the sails is essential, as the air flow passing around both the inside and outside of the rear 'ribbon' has a stabalising effect and seems to give the kite more 'lift' or elevation.
- This one's a bit involved - http://www.howtomakeandflykites.com/kites-to-make/the-box-kite.html
10g
A tetrahedral kite is a multi-celled rigid box kite composed of tetrahedrally shaped cells. The cells are usually arranged in such a way that the entire kite is also a regular tetrahedron. The kite can be described as a compound dihedral kite as well.
This kite was created by Alexander Graham Bell. It came about from his experiments with Hargrave's Box Kites and his attempts to build a kite that was big enough to carry both a man and a motor. Bell wrote about his discovery of this concept in the National Geographic June 1903 issue; the article was titled "Tetrahedral Principle in Kite Structure".
This style kite, while not an easy kite to make compared to the simple cross kite, is a very stable kite and is easy to fly. It flies well in moderate to heavy winds if it is properly set up.
- http://www.instructables.com/id/Tetrahedral-Kite/
- http://www.cit.gu.edu.au/~anthony/kites/tetra/straw_plan/
References
- Categoría: Tiene imagen de insignia
- Categoría:Libro de Respuestas de Especialidades JA/Especialidades
- Categoría:Libro de Respuestas de Especialidades JA
- Categoría:Libro de Respuestas de Especialidades JA/Nivel de Destreza 1
- Categoría: Libro de respuestas de especialidades JA/Especialidades introducidas en 1986
- Categoría:Libro de Respuestas de Especialidades JA/Asociación General
- Adventist Youth Honors Answer Book/Recreation/es
- Adventist Youth Honors Answer Book/Recreation/Primary/es
- Categoría:Libro de Respuestas de Especialidades JA/Etapa 0
- Adventist Youth Honors Answer Book/Recreation Master Award/es
- Adventist Youth Honors Answer Book