翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Peter Glover
・ Peter Gloystein
・ Peter Gluckman
・ Peter Glynn
・ Peter Gläser
・ Peter Goalby
・ Peter Godber
・ Peter Goddard
・ Peter Goddard (educationalist)
・ Peter Goddard (motorcycle racer)
・ Peter Goddard (physicist)
・ Peter Godfrey
・ Peter Garnsey
・ Peter Garratt
・ Peter Garrett
Peter Garrison
・ Peter Garthwaite
・ Peter Gartmayer
・ Peter Garza
・ Peter Gast
・ Peter Gaszynski
・ Peter Gatehouse
・ Peter Gatenby
・ Peter Gatenby (cricketer)
・ Peter Gatenby (doctor)
・ Peter Gatien
・ Peter Gatkuoth
・ Peter Gauweiler
・ Peter Gavigan
・ Peter Gavin


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Peter Garrison : ウィキペディア英語版
Peter Garrison

Peter Garrison is an American journalist and amateur aircraft designer/builder. He was born in Los Angeles, California, in 1943, and received a BA in English from Harvard College in 1965.
In 1968–1973, while living in Tarzana, California, he designed and built an all-metal, two-seat, single-engine low-wing monoplane. The design was influenced by the T-18 of John Thorp and the PL-2 of Ladislao Pazmany, both California airplane designer/builders.〔 (Nov 1970, pp 44–51 ) (Aug 1971, pp 58–63 ) (May 1972, pp 46–51 ) (Mar 1973, pp 106–111 ) Retrieved 13 June 2013〕 Garrison called the plane Melmoth after an 1820 Gothic novel, ''Melmoth the Wanderer''. It was notable for unusually long range and for Mr. Garrison's lack of academic qualifications for designing it. With his companion, television documentary producer Nancy Salter, Mr. Garrison used the aircraft to fly to Europe, Japan and South America.〔 (Dec 1976, pp 47–52, 110-111 ) (Jan 1977, pp 39–43, 74-76 ) Retrieved 13 June 2013〕 The 1976 Pacific crossing was the first nonstop flight from the United States to Japan by a homebuilt aircraft.
In 1981 he began design work on an enlarged fuselage for Melmoth. In 1982, however, the original airplane was destroyed at Orange County (California) Airport (now John Wayne) when a landing Cessna collided with it. The completely redesigned Melmoth 2 first flew in 2002. It is constructed of glass- and carbon-fiber-reinforced composites and has four seats; the rear seats face aft, an arrangement that reduces the required cabin size and center-of-gravity range. The airplane, which has retractable landing gear, large hydraulically operated Fowler flaps and a 200 hp turbocharged Continental engine salvaged from the first Melmoth, is based at Whiteman Airport in Los Angeles. Like its predecessor, it has a cruising range of more than 3,000 miles.
Peter Garrison is a free-lance writer. He contributes two monthly columns, (Aftermath ) and (Technicalities ), to ''Flying'' magazine, for which he has written since 1968.〔 With David Pinella, he co-founded (AeroLogic ), a company that creates and sells computer software programs to analyze fluid dynamics.
Mr. Garrison has 4,000 hours of flight time. He holds a single-/multi-engine commercial pilot license with instrument, Learjet, helicopter, seaplane, glider, gyroplane and hot-air balloon ratings.〔
He is the great-grandson of the Armenian author Muratsan. He and Ms. Salter have a son, Nicholas, born in 1981, and a daughter, Lily, born in 1988.
Mr. Garrison has no connection to Craig Shaw Gardner, a prolific science-fiction writer, born in 1949, who writes under the pseudonym "Peter Garrison."
==Bibliography==

*
*
*

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Peter Garrison」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.