Charles Reynard
Charles Reynard (Charles Renard, from December 23, 1847 to April 5, 1905) is a French engineer. I contribute to the standardization in the engineering field, and the name remains to the number of Reynard of "the standard number". I contributed to the development of the airship.
I was born in Damblain of Vosges. I worked at a military balloon research institute of the chalet Mu Don and became a director later. I established the system of dimensions to reduce a kind of the thickness of the a great variety of ropes of the balloon in 1870, and this came to be called the number of Reynard. I was taken in in international standard ISO3 in 1952.
In 1877, I established a military balloon research institute in chalet Mu Don. This became the experiment facilities of the world's first plane. I built the hangar (Hangar Y) to receive it with the assembling of the airship in 1879.
Reynard and Arthur Krebs (Arthur Krebs) produced airship, "France" (La France). France flew it by a propeller driven by the motor which assumed a battery power source and flew the world's first go-around on August 9, 1884. A flight of approximately 8km was carried out by the flight of 23 minutes.
Reynard performs much invention, and the invention of the Reynard turn board used for the power examination of the engine is included in that. I cooperated with a study of French early plane student フェルベール (Ferdinand Ferber).
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