EAA AirVenture

Wright B Flyer flies at AirVenture

150723WBF-AirVenture-60-pressOSHKOSH, Wis.—The Wright B Flyer made its first flight in an EAA AirVenture air show Thursday afternoon, July 23—with the air show announcer riding shotgun.

Photo of Wright B Flyer on the flightline at EAA AirVenture 2015.
Wright B Flyer on the flight line at EAA AirVenture 2015. (Wright B Flyer photos by Timothy R. Gaffney)

Danny Clisham, one of the best-known voices in the air show industry, flew in the right seat of the primitive-looking biplane as it trundled slowly through the sky past thousands of spectators with Wright B Flyer Chief Pilot Rich Stepler at the controls.

As they flew, Clisham recited the history of the Wright brothers’ accomplishments that led to their building of America’s first airplane factory in Dayton in 1910 and their first production airplane—the Wright Model B.

Photo of Danny Clisham and Rich Stepler on the Wright B Flyer.
Air Show Announcer Danny Clisham (left) and Wright B Flyer Chief Pilot Rich Stepler ready to fly in Thurday’s AirVenture air show.

The Wright B Flyer in Thursday’s show is a modern lookalike of the original airplane. Instead of wood, wire and cotton, it’s made of modern aircraft materials and components and features modern flight controls—ailerons instead of warping wings, for example.

Wright “B” Flyer Inc., an all-volunteer nonprofit, flies and maintains the airplane in Dayton, Ohio as a flying symbol of Dayton’s, Ohio’s and America’s aviation heritage. It has had the airplane on display all week in the Vintage Area of the Experimental Aircraft Association’s (EAA’s) annual AirVenture fly-in convention on Wittman Airport.

The organization is promoting its project to build a successor to the aging airplane in the original Wright brothers’ factory with the help of EAA members and chapters. Besides building a new airplane, the project is aimed at raising awareness of the historic factory and plans to restore it as a national park site. EAA is supporting the project and invited Wright B flyer to display and fly its airplane here.

Photo of Danny Clisham and Rich Stepler on the Wright B Flyer.
Danny Clisham and Rich Stepler fly past the AirVenture crowd in the Wright B Flyer on Thursday.

The airplane is scheduled to fly again in Sunday’s air show.

Visit wright-b-flyer.org for more information about the organization and its airplane. Visit wrightfactory.org for more information about the Wright Company factory.

Wright B Flyer makes AirVenture debut

Photo of Wright "B" Flyer taxiing from the Vintage Area at EAA AirVenture 2015.
Wright “B” Flyer pilots taxi the “Brown Bird” to a hangar Monday after its first day on display at EAA AirVenture 2015. (Wright “B” Flyer photos by Timothy R. Gaffney)

NEWS
For immediate release
July 20, 2015

Contact: Timothy R. Gaffney
Volunteer media director
Phone (cell): (937) 219-8277
[email protected]

Editors: Click on the photos for downloadable, high-resolution images.

OSHKOSH, Wis.—The one-of-a-kind Wright B Flyer made its AirVenture debut on Monday, July 20, when it went on display at the Experimental Aircraft Association’s (EAA’s) fly-in convention and air show.

Photo of Wright "B" Flyer on display with Wittman Field tower in background.
Wittman Field’s control tower is visible in background as the Wright “B” Flyer is on display at EAA’s AirVenture 2015.

AirVenture 2015 is the first time Wright “B” Flyer Inc., an all-volunteer organization from Dayton, Ohio, has brought its flying airplane, dubbed the Brown Bird, to the world’s biggest gathering of aircraft homebuilders and aviation enthusiasts. The Brown Bird will be on display all week and is to fly in EAA’s daily air show Thursday and Sunday.

EAA invited Wright B Flyer to AirVenture to help spread word about its project to build a new airplane with the help of EAA chapters around the country. The new Wright “B” Flyer will be built in the original Wright Company factory in Dayton.

“We’ve had wonderful cooperation from absolutely everybody,” Wright B Flyer Chief Pilot Rich Stepler said Morning after taxiing the airplane across the field from the hanger where the group’s volunteers reasseembled it last week.

Wright "B" Flyer taxies on Wittman Field at EAA AirVenture on Monday, July 20.
Wright “B” Flyer taxies on Wittman Field at EAA AirVenture on Monday, July 20.

AirVenture visitors crowded around the airplane, which is a modern flying machine made to resembled the Wright brothers’ first production airplane. Unlike the wood-and-cotton original, the Brown Bird is made with steel, carbon fiber, aircraft fabric and other modern materials and components.

“This is one of the things you tell folks back home about,” said Jim Vogt, a retired civil engineer from Cypress, Texas.

Wright B Flyer President Jay Jabour is scheduled to give a presentation about the airplane at 11 a.m. Tuesday on Vintage Plaza. The airplane’s scheduled air show flight times are 2:30 p.m. Thursday and 3 p.m. Sunday.

The Brown Bird has been flying since 1982, but increasing maintenance needs and the difficulty of transporting it to distant venues has prompted the organization to build a replacement.

Wright “B” Flyer Inc. is an all-volunteer, membership based, 501c3 nonprofit that displays and flies replicas of the Wright brothers’ first factory-built airplane. Its hangar-museum is open Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays from 9 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Admission is free. Wright B Flyer is a partner of the National Aviation Heritage Alliance, which is supporting its AirVenture visit.

Visit http://wrightfactory.org for more information about the Wright Company factory. Visit https://www.wright-b-flyer.org for more information about the organization and its mission.

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