..........The
          country town of Grafton is situated to the North of New South Wales
          (NSW) in Australia. During spring they hold their annual 'Jacaranda
          Festival'. It's a time when most of the surrounding villagers and
          business's all join in on a street parade and other events. A time when
          old friendships are rekindled and a good time is enjoyed by all.
          ..........The
          Grafton Water Ski Club made the fateful request that would lead to the
          creation of the modern hang glider when they asked John Dickenson if he
          would build and fly a water-ski kite for their display at the annual
          Jacaranda Festival.
          ..........As
          new arrivals in Grafton the Dickenson's had joined the Water Ski Club,
          not just for recreation, but also to help them to integrate into the
          local community. This really was the strongest force acting upon
          Dickenson when he accepted the task. He had no 'dreams of glory', no
          'grand plan' to revolutionise aviation, just a simple desire to
          contribute to the community in which he lived.
          ..........His
          father had taught him how to make five-sided kites when he was a boy.
          How hard could it be? Dickenson had never seen a water-ski kite, so he
          set about building models, working with the descriptions he was given
          by various club members, and his acquired knowledge of kites and wings.
          All the versions he came up with worked fine, until he hung a weight
          under them, when they all became horribly unstable.
          ..........As
          this process continued, Dickenson heard more accounts, not just of the
          kites, but of the flights, and all these accounts ended with
          spectacular crashes. He began to lose interest in the five-sided kite
          idea, and started casting about for a more stable design.
          ..........Through
          experience, he also knew that powerboats often stopped unexpectedly.
          They could run out of fuel, have water or dirt in the fuel, or just run
          aground on sandbanks. In a kite, this meant you dropped from the sky
          without any dignity. He felt that an ability to glide would be good, so
          the pilot could simply fly down and land gracefully and safely. He was
          after only a 1:1 glide angle, just enough to get down to the water in
          some comfort and style.
          ..........At
          this stage Dickenson started to look closely at flying foxes that are
          common in many parts of Australia. These creatures are amazing fliers,
          being capable of gliding flight, extreme aerobatics, and they can even
          fly backwards.
          ..........He
          began building models based on these wings. One rainy night,
          accompanied by his friend Dave Williams, Dickenson cornered and
          captured a flying fox in his hen run. Williams' account of this was
          hilarious, with lots of slipping over on lots of mud. Anyway, Dickenson
          had a very close look at these amazing flexible wings, and the
          mechanics involved in them. Batwings are quite complex to build.
          Dickenson built models based on these studies and they flew very well
          with a good 7:1 or 8:1 glide angle. That was much better than the 1:1
          glide angle Dickenson wanted – in fact, it was too good. Such a glide
          angle meant that if an emergency landing was necessary, the wing could
          end up over land, or worse, in a crowd of people. Better control would
          be needed if the wing was to be safe.
          It was at  this stage that John Dickenson was shown a photograph of a wing NASA was  working with.
          The photo shown to Dickenson was of a paraglider, a structureless wing
          being designed by a number of engineers at NASA. Dickenson was led to
          believe, from his one sighting of the article, that the paraglider
          shown in it was a successful design, that was actually being used to
          return space capsules to earth. This of course turned out to be an
          incorrect assumption. This is true for the many articles published
          about the NASA / Ryan paraglider program, the Fleep, the Flexwing, the
          PARESEV (US N75-70841) and the paraglider were all presented to the
          public as successful designs when in fact they were known to have
          stability and control problems.
          ..........While
          NASA was the acknowledged source of the wing for Dickenson, all
          Dickenson took from them was the double conical airfoil. This airfoil
          dates back centuries to the Japanese kite, the Tosa Dako. The famous
          French artist Jan Lavezzari used the airfoil in his 1904 attempts to
          fly. (Note, it is most probable that Jan Lavezzari based his wing on
          boat sails, rather than the Japanese kites.) The airfoil was next fully
          explored by Ulysses Lee and William Darrah in the USA. The explanation
          of the aerodynamics of this airfoil are in their 'Flying Machine'
          patent US 989786, filed early in 1910.
          ..........The
          airfoil was also used by both Robert Bach, US 2463135, and George
          Wanner, US 2537560. It was not, however, part of the Gertrude Rogallo
          kite patent, US 2546078.
          ..........There
          is also evidence (TV News footage) of this airfoil being attached to
          water-ski kite airframes in Indonesia in the mid 1950s, and an article
          has appeared in the Cross Country magazine.
          Dickenson's first
          thought was that he would need to give it a frame so that it could be
          held out of the water, and he came up with an original airframe. Others
          had used the double conical wing before this, but their airframes were
          substantially different from the elegant simplicity of the one that
          Dickenson assembled. His wing was almost a marriage of the Wanner
          and Bach kites with a control system added.
          ..........In
          fact it was fortunate that Dickenson had not seen photographs of any of
          these other rigid-framed machines, or it would have polluted his
          thought process. For example, had Dickenson been aware of the hang
          glider Barry Hill Palmer built in 1961, he would simply have copied it.
          Even the strange and flawed design of the PARASEV could have altered
          the result, had Dickenson been shown a photo of it. He was better off
          seeing less, not more, of the strange goings on at NASA.
          ..........Dickenson
          made models using a simple four-stick airframe. He quickly concluded
          that a 90 degree sail cut, with an 80 degree nose angle, gave the most
          stable results. There was however one problem - the wing performed
          nearly as well as the batwing-based models. Dickenson still needed
          control.
          ..........It
          is worth considering that it was a lack of adequate control that caused
          Otto Lilienthal's fatal crash after nearly 2,500 successful flights.
          ..........Although
          many people had built hang gliders that flew following Otto
          Lilienthal's first hang glider flights, control at speeds below 25
          miles per hour was still the real problem. Three-axis-control needs
          airspeed to make it work. Until you reach that speed you are out of
          control. I have yet to learn of anyone foot launching a Volmer Jenson
          VJ23 in still air.
          ..........The
          style of weight-shift control used by Otto Lilienthal, and later by
          others right up until the 1970s, was so inefficient that the pilot
          could not correct for even mild turbulence. You also had to literally
          hang on to the glider as well. This is not conducive to long flights,
          nor to high flights. Indeed the advice was: 'Don't fly higher than you
          are prepared to fall.' It was ground skimming rather than free flying.
          ..........So
          Dickenson now had two wing designs - one simple to build, one a real
          challenge, but both requiring a means of adequate control.
          ..........As
          is well known, the solution came to Dickenson while he was pushing his
          daughter Helen sideways on a swing at a park. The swings are gone now,
          being considered too dangerous in today's cotton wool world. In 1963
          they provided the vital clue to enable controllable low-speed fight.
          So now  Dickenson had a theory about control, he needed to establish if it could work.
          ..........Using
          materials scavenged from a rubbish tip, and some banana bag plastic, he
          built a half-scale model. This development model was not intended to
          fly, indeed it was built small to ensure that it wouldn't, at any
          reasonable speed. At 200 mph it could have been an exciting toy, but at
          the maximum speed of the club's ski boats it was never going to carry a
          pilot.
          ..........The
          test was successful. By swinging his weight John Dickenson was able to
          get the small wing to take him from side to side while skiing. The wing
          knocked his helmet over his eyes so the trial ended in an inglorious
          fashion, but it proved to Dickenson that his idea could work.
          ..........Bruce
          Young and a couple of other enthusiastic club members spent some time
          after that tearing up and down the river trying to get the little wing
          to lift them off the water, but Dickenson was already away working on
          the real machine.
          ..........Money
          was an issue for Dickenson, and the wing was intended to be used only
          for the festival displays, and then thrown out. There was no
          justification for large investments in this project, and no funds to
          make them anyway.
          ..........Building
          models is one thing. Building a man-carrying wing is quite another.
          Even though the stunt was planned to be over water, it was not
          desirable to have the wing fold up on launch. Oregon, (Douglas Fir),
          wood was used for the main spars, its strength to weight ratio being
          comparable to Spruce.
          ..........Banana  plastic was used for the membrane. John tested this to make sure that it was  strong enough for the task.
          ..........Note:-
          The three wooden spars and a membrane, by themselves would make a
          'Flying Wing' kite of the type American Robert Bach patented in 1947.
          However, John Dickenson knew nothing about the Bach Patent.
          ..........Adding
          a cross bar, to define the nose angle, is an important step. With the
          Bach concept, the wing is free to flex as the leading edges swing in
          and out in turbulence. This is fine with a kite, but it is a problem
          with a glider. Changing the nose angle and billow also changes the
          centre of lift on a double conical airfoil, (note:- this is not an
          issue with a cylindrical airfoil.), so the cross bar is an important
          aerodynamic component of the double conical wing.
          ..........Part
          of Dickenson's area of responsibility at Gus Robinson Electrical was
          the installation of TVs and TV Aerials. The aerial masts often had to
          be quite tall to get a good reception and they were being made of
          aluminium tubing braced with wire. While Dickenson did not erect the
          aerials himself, he had tested the components, and he had a real
          'hands-on' understanding of the strength of both the aluminium tubing
          and the wire cable. He had tested the cables, and the method of tying
          the wire, to breaking point. Dickenson had access to aluminium tubing,
          but it was not strong enough for the main spars, and it only came in 10
          foot lengths. There is an obvious transference of technology from TV
          aerial to the hang glider airframe.
          ..........The
          first task was to establish the size of the wing. Dickenson is very
          good at mathematics, and was a wizard with a slide rule. He came up
          with a wing size using 16 foot spars and set about to build his water
          ski kite substitute.
          ..........Working
          alone, Dickenson began constructing his wing. The length of the
          aluminium meant that the spar / cross-bar had to be forward of the
          optimum position, but that limitation was acceptable. This thing was
          still only a theoretical device, and it was meant to be disposable.
          Dickenson, at this point in time, still had no aspirations for the
          wing. His total motivation was simply to meet his commitment to the
          water ski club. There was no 'future vision' here, yet. He expected the
          wing to do no more than amuse a small crowd of spectators in a rural
          town. He did not, at this stage, imagine that he would build a second
          wing. He was not thinking that others would copy it. He didn't know if
          it would even work, but the mathematics, and the models, said that it
          could.
          ..........There
          is mathematics involved in the control system as well. The distance
          below the Centre of Gravity to position the handle bar and the pilot.
          This is all about leverage and accounting for the pilot's arm reach.
          The seat was positioned to duplicate the position of a rider on a
          motorbike, Dickenson was an enthusiastic motorcyclist. He needed enough
          control, but not too much or he could end up with over controlling
          issues.
          ..........The
          wing at this stage was rigged with fore and aft wires, from the
          handle-bar ends, to the front and to the rear of the keel. Steel struts
          went from the ends of the handle-bar to where the spacer / cross-bar
          joined the leading edges, plus a set of cables going from the ends of
          the handle-bar to a point halfway between the rear tip of the
          leading-edges and the strut / leading-edge junction.
          Making the
          sail was a huge undertaking, banana bag plastic stuck together with
          insulation tape sounds much easier to do than it is in reality. The
          banana bag plastic is very slippery to work with.
          ..........The
          solution Dickenson used to attach the sail to the frame, clamping the
          sail between the leading edges and a strip of wood with nails, was
          mechanically the same as the method adopted by Otto Lilienthal, but
          John Dickenson's version was crude, while Lilienthal's was a work of
          craftsmanship.
          ..........On
          the morning of 7th of September 1963, John Dickenson carried the
          machine the two and a half kilometres to the Grafton Water Ski Club
          room for final assembly. At this stage the machine lacked the
          refinements that would make it easily portable, and easy to assemble.
          ..........Once
          it was assembled Dickenson tried to get it to fly. He exhausted himself
          being towed behind a boat with the wing, but he couldn't get it to fly.
          Norm Stamford was next to try and he encountered the same problem.
          ..........Adjustments
          were made and Bob Clements had a go. Now, strictly speaking, Bob
          Clements was the first to fly the wing, however he went up fast, and
          down fast, to crash heavily into the water. Part of his problem was
          that Dickenson had moved the hang point back too far after the first
          two attempts showed it was possibly too far forward. Also, it is
          possible that the boat driver over-reacted to the high climb rate and
          cut the throttle, thus stalling the wing at a very high nose angle. It
          is also possible that Bob Clements over-reacted to the unexpectedly
          high nose angle and climb rate. The fact that the glider survived the
          crash from about 80 feet demonstrated its structural integrity, as well
          as the value of testing over water. It also indicated that the boat had
          either stopped, or slowed considerably before the impact, thus reducing
          the forces on the wing.
          ..........John
          Dickenson made some more adjustments to the C of G, and then Rod Fuller
          had a go, "It seemed like a reasonable proposition to me," is how Rod
          Fuller explains his willingness to have a go, even after the
          spectacular crash. With Pat Crowe as Fuller's chosen boat driver, and
          Bruce Young observing, the fourth attempt succeeded, the C of G wasn't
          perfect yet, and the strong wind made this a difficult exercise, but
          the three men involved made it work safely. Making headlines in the
          local newspaper the Grafton Examiner.
          ..........Rod
          Fuller and Pat Crowe have exciting stories of their roles in this
          success. Neither Pat Crowe nor Rod Fuller had any idea just how
          different this wing would be to a flat kite, but they were up to the
          task, neither panicked and they both dealt with their initial shock at
          their spectacular success with courage and intelligence. Dickenson had
          not been present at the Club house when Rod had finally got the glider
          into the air. However, as he was driving over the road bridge on his
          way back to the club, he was surprised to see Rod in the air.
          ..........Following
          this successful flight, and after listening to Rod Fuller's account,
          Dickenson made some more adjustments to the C of G, and he also moved
          the handle-bar forward. It was quite late when Dickenson finally got to
          have another go with the wing and the strong winds encountered by Rod
          Fuller had died away. Everything went perfectly, the wing flew well,
          there were no surprises and the control worked. Dickenson found that he
          could swing to each side and go up and down at will.
          ..........It
          was at this point, while up in the air in his creation, that the
          enormity of what he had done hit home. He was suddenly aware that he
          was in a lovely little aeroplane, and that, inadvertently, he was
          continuing the work of Otto Lilienthal.
          ..........Dickenson's
          excitement was almost overwhelming and he immediately set about drawing
          up a patent application for his 'Improved Gliding Apparatus'.
          ..........Now
          everything was different for John Dickenson, aware of what he had, and
          suddenly with a vision of the future, he reappraised the glider.
          ..........By
          shifting the top of the struts from the leading edges to the keel he
          could substantially increase the glider's strength, for no appreciable
          gain in weight. This created the first 'A-Frame'. The struts were
          replaced with a second set of side wires. The original configuration
          had two bolts through the leading edges at the nose plate. By
          abandoning the second unnecessary set of bolts, ..........the wing became  easier to rig and de rig.
          And so, by the time the Jacaranda Festival arrived, the wing, to all
          intents and purposes, possessed all of the desirable qualities that
          would lead eventually to it being cloned in the thousands, all over the
          world.
          ..........Fuller
          and Dickenson continued to fly the wing after the festival, but
          Dickenson was already working on the second wing. This time he used an
          all aluminium airframe, but his lack of welding skills resulted in a
          rectangular frame to position the handle-bar. Dickenson again utilized
          the banana bags, and used contact adhesive to attach it to the
          airframe. The main spars were reduced to 14 feet, he wanted to increase
          the take-off and landing speed to harmonize with the speeds that water
          skis work well at. The big wing wanted to fly before the pilot was able
          to ski properly. This Glider, that we call the Mark 2 , flew well, but
          the contact adhesive was not up to the job and so the wing was quickly
          abandoned.
          ..........The
          next wing saw a return to the wooden spars so that the banana plastic
          could again be attached using nails. The wing was reduced in size
          yet again as the 14 foot wing was still flying at a slower than
          desirable speed for water skiing.
          ..........Dickenson
          found a bent steel bed-head at the rubbish tip, by simply increasing
          the bends he was able to return to the triangular A-frame of the Mark
          I, without needing welding skills. It is interesting how many people
          copied that 'Bed-head' bent base bar design, indeed it was still being
          produced in the late 1970's, even though it is an inferior structural
          design.
          ..........Dickenson
          flew this wing in many places, attempting to sell it to finance the
          next one. Then in Late 1963 the Grafton examiner published an article
          on the Dickenson Wing and Rod Fuller. The quality is very poor but at
          least it has survived and can be read. Although the exact date is
          unknown at this time.
          ..........John
          Dickenson’s invention is a milestone on the road of human evolution.
          John Dickenson did not invent hang gliding, nor did he build the first
          hang glider and when he set out on the project he did not even intend
          to build a hang glider.
          ..........The
          thing is that John Dickenson built the best hang glider ever witnessed
          until that time. John had the complete package. The Dickenson Wing did
          not boast the highest performance but it had the following
          characteristics.
          ..........Handling
          Superiority: The wing flew well with exquisite handling
          characteristics, it was safe, and it was easy to fly. The Dickenson
          Pendulum Weight-Shift System provides exquisite feedback so that flying
          quickly becomes instinctual. This gives the pilot the opportunity to
          relax and enjoy the experience.
          ..........User  Friendly: It was easy to pack up and even easier to set up.
          Convenient:  It was light; easy to move when set up, and even easier to move when packed up.
          ..........Environmentally
          Friendly: It was easily car top-able and it could be stored in a
          hallway or bedroom. Many lived under houses and in car sheds.
          ..........Strong
          and Durable: It was robust, how many aircraft could handle stalled
          take-offs and nose-ins, plus botched landings, and then still be
          flyable with at most a control bar upright needing replacement.
          ..........Easy
          to Fly: It was that simple to fly that people were able to teach
          themselves to fly. Not all were successful, but many thousands were.
          Eventually people who figured it out started schools and the rest is
          history.
          ..........Easy
          to Build: This was something of a problem because although the design
          was simple to build, there were the rules of physics to be obeyed at
          all times. Many efforts to home build, and even at times some
          commercially built designs were dangerous.
          ..........Safe:
          By the time Aerostructures stop manufacturing the Skiwings, the glider
          was a complete aircraft. Aerostructures is another part of this story.
          Both Bill Bennett and Bill Moyes purchased off the shelf Skiwings from
          Aerostructures. Many early builders copied these two wings, thinking
          that the idea came from Bennett and / or Moyes.
          ..........Quote:
          "In 1964 a Brisbane newspaper published a picture of John Dickenson’s
          creation. A man called Robin Bishop had seen it and wrote to his friend
          Francis Rogallo in Virginia, USA, explaining that an Australian had
          independently developed the Rogallo principle into a perfectly viable
          man-carrying aeroplane for so little money it was laughable.
          Understandably interested, Rogallo wrote to John in September 1964
          requesting information. On the 24th November, the entire plans and
          general specification of the Ski Wing were sent back to him at the
          Langley Research Centre. In just about every detail the craft described
          in the drawings is identical to what became known throughout the world
          as the Standard Rogallo, a type of glider which would not become
          obsolete for another ten years. Unquote. Taken from the book 'And The
          World Could Fly' by Stéphane Malbos. Book No ISBN: 2-9508644-5-7.
          ..........Francis
          Rogallo replied to John on 29th January 1965. He wrote: "To get back to
          your glider design, I hope to make some copies of your drawings and
          perhaps have some individual or groups build a glider like yours
          locally. Your design looks better than other ski kites that I have seen
          and I wish you great success with it." These letters are displayed on
          the John Dickenson website.
          ..........An
          incident that happened during 1964 shows just how easy it was to leant
          how to fly a Dickenson Wing. John sold  the third glider he had
          made (Mk3) to Rex Beroth at the Ski Lodge Tweed Heads NSW for £65. It
          was handed to the skiers of the water ski show, and told to sort it out
          who could fly it, as John had left no instructions. Ron Nickel took up
          the challenge and taught himself to fly the glider within a few days.
          He flew it  four or five times a week during the summer for about
          five years. The glider is still in existence  and a bill of
          receipt  being looked after by Ron's wife. While Graeme finds a
          home for it. Sadly since then Ron has also passed away and I last saw
          his wife at Ron's memorial service that was held at Tweed Heads.
         
        John Dickenson 
          Awards  of Significance 
        Looking
          back over all the information  Graeme and Myself gathered and
          accumulate over the years. It's worth noting that very slowly John
          Dickenson's name gradually started to appear around the world by the
          honours others started to bestow upon him.
          1993 British Hang Gliding and  Paragliding Association: Life Membership.
          1993 Hang Gliding Federation of  Australia: Life Membership.
          1995 The Space Technology Hall of  Fame.
          1996 Order of Australia Medal. OAM.
          2006 Hang Gliding Federation:  Certificate of Recognition.
          2011 United States Hang Gliding and  Paragliding Association: Presidential Citation.
          2012 Hang Gliding Federation of Australia: Acknowledgment of invention
          of the          
          modern hang glider.
          2012 Fédération Aéronautique  Internationale's (F.A.I.): Gold Air Medal.
          2013 Royal Federation of Aero Clubs  of Australia: Oswald Watt Gold Medal.