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Spanish engineer and aeronautical scientist, inventor of the autogyre
Juan de la Cierva was born in Murcia in 1895 and since childhood he showed great interest in aeronautics. When he was just 16, he and two colleagues built his first biplane BCD-1. Since there wasn’t Aeronautical Engineer career in Spain, he studied Civil Engineering and ended it in 1919. The same year he designed the bomber biplane C-3. After extending his studies of Aeronautics in England, he designed the autogyro, based on the rotation of paddles located over the aircraft. It was patented in 1920 and its first model, the C-4, flew successfully in 1923 in Madrid. Between 1920 and 1936 he continued to refine its prototypes, performing about 40 models. In December 1936, he died in the crash of the airliner in which he was traveling. Juan de la Cierva was recognized internationally and praised by Thomas A. Edison and Henry Ford, with the delivery of the Gold Medal at the Guggenheim International Exhibition in Chicago.
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ortografie alternativă:
de la Cierva, Juan; de la Cierva y Codorníu, Juan
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Curriculum vitae
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* 21.09.1895
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Murcia, Spain
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nǎscut
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1912
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He built and flew a biplane, which was designated BCD-1 and was nicknamed the Crab.
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1919
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Spain
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He built the C-3, a five-ton bomber biplane.
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1920
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Spain
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He patented the Autogiro, an aircraft with a front propeller and in which the wings were replaced by rotating blades.
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1920 - 1936
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He built 40 different prototypes of his aircraft.
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1924
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Paris
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He taked part in the IX Exhibition of Aerodynamics.
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1926
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London
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He founded his own company of aircrafts with name "Cierva Autogiro".
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19.09.1928
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He crossed the English Channel with his autogyro C-8.
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1929
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Sevilla, Spain
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The Autogyre is shown in the Iberoamerican Exhibition
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† 09.12.1936
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United Kingdom
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mort
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