March 16, 2009

Invents Hourmeter to Time Hops (Sep, 1930)

Filed under: Aviation, Useless Tech — @ 10:58 pm
Source: Modern Mechanix ( More articles from this issue )
Issue: Sep, 1930
| Buy on Ebay

This was the cutting edge in aviation technology until the introduction of the minutemeter in WWII.

Invents Hourmeter to Time Hops

THROUGH an electrical contact attached to the landing gear, the recently invented hourmeter timing device records trip and total flying time the moment the plane leaves the ground. The same contact stops the clock when the landing is made. Spreading and contracting of the landing gear actuates the electrical circuit. Current is supplied by two dry cells, or from the ship’s battery.

Aeronautical experts declare that this instrument will fill in one of the gaps of aviation.

3 Comments »

  1. Actually, flight hours is a very important measure in maintenance. This sounds like the beginning of the application of systematic measurement to aircraft maintenance. Pretty important indeed, if you don’t want the arse of your airplane to fall off! :)

    Alan

    Comment by Al — March 18, 2009 @ 8:31 am

  2. LOVE the Sub-Mo-Plane on the magazine cover!

    Rick

    Comment by rick — March 18, 2009 @ 12:31 pm

  3. Most small planes these days have a “Hobbs meter” (brand name), but it is usually wired to count the time the engine is running, not the actual time in flight. Taxi time puts wear on the engine, too. The meter looks like a car’s odometer, and is used like an odometer for determining maintenance schedules. It’s also used for charging rental time if the plane is rented out, and pilots often use it to determine hours flown to record in their logbooks.

    Comment by Richard C — March 18, 2009 @ 1:42 pm

RSS feed for comments on this post.

Leave a comment

Popular Posts

Recently Last 7 Days
Last 30 Days Last Year

46 queries. 0.712 seconds.