David Barish, The Father of Ground Launching and
Paragliding
By Xavier Murillo
In
the early 1960s, the USA and USSR were fully engaged
in a race to get the first man on the moon. David
Barish, an American aeronautical engineer, invented
a new parachute for bringing spacecraft gently back
to earth. He tested his new wing shape by
self-launching, and was so excited by its
possibilities that he set off round the ski resorts
of the USA demonstrating his newly found summer
sport. During research that has spanned twelve years
and three continents, Xavier Murillo has discovered
the true birth date of paragliding - 1965 - and went
to talk to the man that started it all.
February 1988, Annemasse,
France
Whilst researching my book "La folle Histoire du
Parapente", I met a parachutist from Annemasse:
André Bohn, one of the three pioneers of paragliding
in France. On Sunday 27th June 1978, André had
launched from Mieussy and glided all the way down to
the football pitch in the valley 1000 metres below.
When I asked how he came upon he idea of
foot-launching a ram-air parachute, André told that
he had seen it described in the "Parachute Manual",
a technical magazine by Dan Poynter written for
professional parachutists. This was a revelation to
me, as it was now obvious that contrary to popular
belief, paragliding wasn’t invented in Mieussy,
France… even though it was there that the concept
flourished through the passion and dedication of
pioneers like Jean-Claude Bétemps, Gérard Bosson and
the "Choucas" club of Mieussy.
January 1992, Melbourne,
Australia
After a competition in Victoria, I paid a visit to
the meet director who ran a small parachute factory
in Melbourne. I discovered his complete year-on-year
collection of the Parachute Manual, and I leafed
through them, hungry for more information. The 1972
edition carried a description of "slope soaring",
described as a method of testing parachutes after a
repair. In the courtyard of the factory, I laid the
book on the ground and photographed the pages. It
served as proof that foot-launching had started as
early as 1970! The black and white photographs show
an astonishingly shaped wing. This was David
Barish’s Sailwing machine, but I would only learn
this fact eight years later. I would long regret my
blatant lack of curiosity as to who the pilot was.
Like me, no-one would push the investigation
further.
January 1998, Musée de
l’Air et de l’Espace, France
Rummaging around in the museum library, I found
another book by Dan Poynter, titled "Hang Gliding"
and dating back to 1973. What a find! More than two
pages are dedicated to "paragliding", which is
described as being very similar to hang gliding.
They are illustrated with the same photos as were
used in the "Parachute Manual". And here, the
inventor of paragliding had a name -David Barish -
and was described in the captions as being the
promoter of the activity, having made several
flights in the ski resorts of the USA. I announced
my discovery in the April 1998 issue of Parapente
magazine in a story titled "Paragliding was born in
the USA." But the editor refused to publish my poor
photo - the glider was too ugly! Fellow journalist
Jean-Paul Budillon picked up on my lead and sniffed
out the contact details of Dan Poynter and David
Barish. I bought a plane ticket to New York.
3rd June 2000,
Manhattan, USA
51st Street, New York. 12th floor. A smiling
gentleman opens the front door of his apartment to
greet me. "Xavier?", he enquires, stretching out his
hand in welcome. It is the culmination of 12 years
of searching for the legitimate father of
paragliding. And over the next three days David
Barish tells me the story of his life and his many
inventions, amongst which is the paraglider. In the
spare room, where I am staying, David shows me the
sewing machine he used to stitch his first designs,
now stowed away under the bed. And sat on the shelf
lies the wooden propeller, of the first paramotor!
David Barish started his
flying career at the age of 18-years-old. In 1939
the US government was suffering a shortage of
pilots, and was offering a free training programme
to new recruits. 'I was soon a co-pilot for TWA,
flying transatlantic routes,' he recalls. 'My
brother, was three years older than me, was a bomber
pilot flying the B17 flying Fortress, and was killed
in the Normandy landings in 1944. I joined the US
Airforce soon after, and trained as a fighter pilot
on the Mustang. But luckily, the day I graduated was
the day Japan surrendered. The war was over.'
David then gained a place
at the prestigious Cal Tech university, where he
obtained a Master’s degree in theoretical
aerodynamics. He put it into good use by working for
the Air Force's Research and Development division at
Dayton. In 1953, he left the armed forces, but
remained a consultant for the Air Force and NASA. In
1955, he designed the Vortex Ring, a revolutionary
parachute consisting of four flexible wings rotating
on an axis, producing the same effect as the blades
of a helicopter. With a better sink rate, a reduced
opening shock, half the weight, and no oscillation,
the Vortex Ring was dubbed 'the perfect parachute.'
Another advantage is that on landing, the Vortex
Ring immediately folds itself up, even in a strong
wind, which avoids being dragged along the ground-
which could be quite an advantage for paraglider
pilots! It was produced by Pioneer, the world’s
leading manufacturer, and is still used today by the
American army.
In the early 60s, the space
race was on, and huge amounts of money were thrown
into development, and it was this that triggered the
invention of paragliders. In 1964, David Barish
applied himself to the design of a parachute for
bringing space capsules back to earth. To avoid
manufacturing parachutes with spans of over 30
metres for carrying capsules weighing 5 tonnes, he
made models of different sizes. He tested them
behind his car, or by hand in a steady wind at
Staten Island ferry.
The first Sailwing was
single surfaced, rectangular shaped and made up of
three lobes. The front of each panel was turned
under and stitched to the undersurface along the
seams joining the panels. This formed a double
surface of over 30 cm. when inflated, it rigidified
the leading edge.
David Barish comments:
"NASA wouldn’t buy a double surface chute. But they
also wanted a better glide. That’s why, in 1966, we
progressed to the version with 5 lobes. Then, the
double surface part was extended to one third of the
chord. It was Domina Jalbert who invented the
entirely double surface parachute. What else about
the design? Well, I thought the enormous stabilizers
were necessary. And spinnaker cloth was an obvious
choice, if you want a wing, you need the lowest
possible porosity. I determined the length of the
lines came from the experience of kite-flyers who
already knew all there was to know on this subject.'
The first flight, in the
company of his son and friend Jacques Istel, took
place in September 1965 at Bel Air in the Cats
Hills. This is a ski resort two hours from New York
and not far from Woodstock (where Hendrix had not
yet played 'Purple Haze' and 'Little Wing'!). David
often flew the slopes of Mount Hunter, in the same
area. A keen skier, David Barish had a crazy idea: a
new summer sport which would consist of skimming
down the grassy slopes of the ski pistes. The new
sport was christened "slope soaring.' At the
suggestion of a friend who was a journalist on "Ski
Magazine', he and his son did a tour of American ski
resorts, from Vermont to California in the summer of
'66. The aim was to demonstrate that "slope soaring"
could be a viable summer activity in ski resorts
Of these barnstorming days,
David remarks, 'It was probably too soon! At that
time, slope soaring, was just for fun. We didn’t
know that it might be possible to soar in thermals
or dynamic wind. We just pushed the sport as being a
fun way to race downhill. We raced down the ski
slopes, skimming the ground, rarely more than thirty
metres up. I still managed to end up in the trees
several times!'
In 1966, NASA was trying to
finalise its choice for recovering the capsule of
the Apollo space shuttle. For the next two years,
David worked hard on his project, trying to convince
NASA of its benefits over the Rogallo design.
'Francis Rogallo came to the wind tunnel one day
during my tests', remarks David. 'He didn’t say
anything, but seemed very interested. In fact, we
had both constructed what would later be called a
paraglider. The Air Force had organized a
demonstration day for the different projects in
California. It was there that the glide ratio of 4.2
of my wing was officially measured.'
But a week after the
demonstration, NASA HQ totally abandoned the idea of
using parachutes. 'They change their mind
sometimes!', David comments with a rye smile. 'Now,
thirty years on, NASA has returned to the use of
parachutes. The most recent, the X34 or "space life
boat", designed for recovering the Space Shuttle
crews, is 30 metres across. The same size as Dave
Barish’s design from 1966!
"When the contract was
terminated I just gave up,' recalls David. 'As far
as parachutes are concerned, I have never thought
that I designed anything which was really much
better than those of Jalbert or Snyder. There were
already 30 or 40 companies and as many legal fights.
My whole professional career has been rooted in
subsonic and supersonic aerodynamics. In the science
of low speed flight, there has been little
innovation in the last 100 years. Most of what we
need to know today has already been written in the
books of Ludwig Prandtl, of the German school of
aerodynamics. "Slope soaring" was a hobby. In order
to develop it, I would have had to dedicate myself
to it full-time. I had other inventions which I
didn't want to neglect.'
---
Closed cells, the profile, trim tabs, spinnaker
fabric, flaps, 8 m lines, high aspect ratios, launch
techniques, tree landings, the paramotor… it all
existed as long ago as the '60s! But the explosion
in popularity of the sport wouldn’t happen for
another 20 years. During the 1980s, David Barish
manufactured another paraglider with semi-closed
cells, and then a hang glider for his son. Then, one
summer's day in 1993, whilst driving near the site
of Ellensville, just outside New York, David spotted
thirty paragliders in the air, and suddenly realized
that slope soaring had grown into a huge sport. His
interest was rekindled.
During a skiing trip to
Europe, he noticed how popular paragliding had
become at resorts like Gstaad (Switzerland). "I was
impressed by the number of companies selling
equipment' he says. 'Technically, I noticed the
Airwave gliders with their diagonal cells.'
The following year, he
visited St. Hilaire in France, where the number of
wings laid out on the carpet finally convinced him
of the sport's size. At over 70 years of age, he
returned to the drawing board and his sewing
machine. "I did it to satisfy my intellectual
curiosity. I looked at every aspect of current
design to maximize performance, starting with a
completely closed cell glider, and then adding a 30
degree sweep- but that didn't work out!"
And in the last two years,
David has even started to fly again! When he
explains that he only flies himself because he 'ran
out of test pilots', you may think he’s joking, but
David did actually lose one of his best friends,
when his aircraft hit a mountain during foggy
conditions. An exciting clip from a video shot by
Johanna during the summer of 1999 shows him taking
off and flying at 100 m above the ground in
turbulent conditions. The wing is an incredible
prototype, very flat and with an aspect ratio of 8.
He reports, "higher aspect ratio is one way to
increase performance. I would not say it’s the easy
way. But it is obvious that the result is a rather
sensitive machine." Always discreet, David Barish
has never promoted his discoveries. Philippe
Renaudin, the Sup’Air importer for the USA, had met
him many times with his wing and "homemade" harness,
before learning that this amazing old gentleman had
invented paragliding 35 years ago! And paramotoring
too! And he still has things to teach us. When
Phillipe told him that his paramotor mysteriously
climbs less well when facing into wind, David
replied straightaway that it was to be expected,
because the angle of the propeller has been designed
for a single pitch angle. The same problem existed
for small propeller aircraft during the thirties,
and was resolved by variable pitch propellers.
David has a daughter from
his first marriage. When Johanna met David, she
warned Johanna straightaway; 'My father does a lot
of mad things, you don’t have to follow him!'
Thousands of paraglider pilots, without knowing it,
have followed David Barish in their quest to fly
like a bird. And it’s Johanna again who has the last
word on her many years living with David: 'We
laughed a lot!' One of the secrets of life!
But the story cannot be
closed here. It is David himself who says: "I
wouldn’t be surprised if one day someone finds a
Russian or a Japanese engineer who did the same
thing before I did!"
SIDEBOX:
David Barish at the St Hilaire Festival
Guest of honour and president of the jury of the
film festival, David Barish delighted everybody he
met with his modesty, his kindness and his limitless
curiosity. He plunged into many passionate
discussions with Gin Seok Song (Gin Gliders), Xavier
Demoury (Nervures) and Jean-Louis Darlet (The Cage).
When flying tandem with Sandie he immediately asked
to fly it himself and was eager to fly again the
following day and play with some thermals. Sandie
commented "I was very flattered to fly with him. He
flew the tandem until the last turn of our approach.
On the drive back back up again we talked about
skiing in Chamonix, where I am from. One day, he got
lost in the fog skiing the Vallée Blanche!" Ever
available, he gave interviews and press conferences,
and had even brought his high aspect ratio prototype
for a few inflations and to ask the opinion of other
manufacturers. Xavier Demoury knew the pedigree of
David Barish and his Sailwing: "I didn’t think it
could fly. It seemed crazy. But David, he made it
fly 20 years in advance of everybody else. The long
lines, ripstop material, the deformation of the
material under the pressure between interior and
exterior; his work enabled us to arrive to where we
are today. He is a true inventor. As for us, we are
only improvers! When I see him, I tell myself that I
still have 30 good years ahead of me. It’s
reassuring! Outside, David and Gin opened up their
gliders. Gin admired David’s incredible wing, with
an aspect ratio of 8, and its two rows of lines with
pyramid cascades. On the brand new Boomerang
prototype, David studied the little plastic rods
which reinforce the leading edge, designed for high
speed using the accelerator.
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