What is Skywriting?
Skywriting is a form of advertising in which the pilot is closed to set a short slogan or catchphrase in letters created by smoke. In general, the customer would determine a specific place and time to appear Skywriting, usually above a large outdoor forum or beach. The message would take just as long as the wind is relatively calm and the sky was clear. The Skywriting disposable plane has largely been replaced by a multi-nail-skytyping, computer-controlled method including the timed smoke clouds from the synchronized aircraft series. During this year's Midwest leaflet, the pilot used the standard edition of Army smoke grenades to demonstrate the efficiency of aircraft as signaling devices on the battlefield. The first military pilots and sensational artists also used smoke to better define their air maners for viewers, occasionally spell letters for effect. In the 1920s, basic Skywriting was already commercially used in some smaller markets.
In November 1922, Skywriting Pioneer and British Royal Air Force (RAF) named John Savage with President of the American tobacco company George Hill, as a colleague Pilot Raf Ace, was named Captain Cyril Turner over New York City. Captain Turner declared "Hello USA Call Vanderbilt 7200" in white smoke. More than 47,000 people called the Vanderbilt Hotel, where George Hill remained. Hill was convinced that John Savage's Skywriting ads would work well to promote his Lucky Strike® cigarette.
Skywriting continued to grow in popularity as an advertising medium and personal report. Customers could ask anything from "Eat in Yzis and Slogans" Will you take me to "Will you take me?" Take me?
The extension of the national highway system after World War II wrote the beginning of the end for industry Skywriting. Instead of publishing a few words in the unstable sky, advertisers could now fill the wholeBillboards with various graphics. These new labels would go through a captured audience of thousands every day, unlike expensive several who would meet the typical Skywriting news. Instead, many airlines turned to permanent banners cloudy to a low flying aircraft.
Some Skywriting is still being done to this day, although only the selected number of pilots retains the skills necessary for this work. Smoke is usually created by a prudent spraying of paraffin oil directly on a hot motor pipe near the tail of the plane. The pilot decides when the need to draw one part of the letter at the same time. Spotter on Earth can also help the pilot during more complex maneuvers.
choreography involved in traditional skywriting can be challenging. Modern Skytyping, on the other hand, requires a stable formation, but no maneuvers of writing letters. Puffs smoke is released according to the main program on the computer. This method allows simple graphics and more complicatedReports, even if it lacks an aspect of traditional skywriting.