Nicholas Rippen Abberly (March 25, 1891 – April 1983) was an American pioneer aviator and member of the Early Birds of Aviation. He also was an inventor and an illustrator using several names and alternate spellings of his name.
Nicholas Rippen Abberly | |
---|---|
Born | March 25, 1891 |
Died | April 1, 1983 | (aged 92)
Occupation | Engineer[1] |
Known for | Pioneer aviator, inventor |
Biography
editHe was born on March 25, 1891.
He built and flew a pusher configuration aircraft from Mineola, New York on Long Island in September 1910. He soloed the aircraft in October 1910.[2]
An inventor by trade, Abberly filed several patents in a wide body of disciplines, including a bottom for floating equipment, rebound equipment for fitness machines, office clipboards, and hot-formed metal columns.[3]
He also created the drawings for Alexander Weygers's Discopter patent.[4][5]
Nicolas adopted several names to identify his work, using Abberly and an alternate spelling Aaberly and at times, Rippen, which is visible on the US2377835 patent drawings.
He died in April 1983 in Cedar Rapids, Iowa.
Patents
edit- US patent 3114345, Nicholas Rippen Abberly, "Bottom for floating equipment", published December 17, 1963
References
edit- ^ "Nicholas Abberly". Popular Mechanics. January 1947.
- ^ "Nicholas Rippen Abberly". Early Aviators. Retrieved 25 March 2012.
- ^ US patent 3114345, Nicholas Rippon Abberly, "Bottom for floating equipment", published December 17, 1963
- ^ Weygers, Alexander. "The Discopter". Google Patents. Retrieved 6 February 2021.
- ^ US patent 2377835, Alexander George Weygers, "Discopter", published June 5, 1945