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Leonardo da Vinci`s lessons in design genius

28 July 2016 [18:11] - TODAY.AZ

By Zaria Gorvett


Famed as a conspirator in The da Vinci Code and as the master painter behind the “Mona Lisa Smile”, Leonardo da Vinci was a true Renaissance man – with passions spanning geology, geometry, astronomy, mathematics, botany, pyrotechnics, optics and zoology. Among his many achievements, he was first to explain why the sky is blue and wrote the words “for every action there is an opposite and equal reaction” 200 years before Newton was born.


But his artistic talent and scientific understanding pale in comparison to a lesser-known side of this enigmatic genius: his inventions.  


He is popularly, though erroneously, credited with inventing scissors. In fact many of his ideas were much, much weirder. From shoes for walking on water to a plane which resembles a giant mechanical bat, to revolving bridges which evoke the magical staircases in Harry Potter; his elaborate designs have a dream-like quality which is irresistibly compelling. After the plague devastated Milan in 1484 he even drew up plans for a utopian city.


For hundreds of years his futuristic designs lay unpublished and unread, languishing in trunks and outhouses. Some 700 pages of notes and sketches were rediscovered in the late 19th Century, but his inventions remained in obscurity until Italian dictator Benito Mussolini commissioned a series of models as part of an effort to stir up nationalist pride in 1939.


On the 500th anniversary of da Vinci’s birth in 1952, a further 39 were made in Milan, recreated using materials which would have been available to him in the 15th Century. The models are on display –among others – at London Science Museum’s exhibition Leonardo da Vinci: The Mechanics of Genius, which runs until 4 September 2016.


“At that time engineering was very practical, so Leonardo was unusual with his sketches. He really invented a new way of inventing, by combining his talent as an artist with his skill as an engineer,” says the exhibitions co-curator, Claudio Giorgione, from the Museo Nazionale della Scienza e della Tecnologia in Milan.


A prototype tank?


If many of da Vinci’s inventions were like something out of a dream, then his design for an armoured vehicle is straight out of a nightmare. Shaped like a cross between a tortoise and a spaceship, this behemoth would have been powered by eight men turning pedals by hand. Though it was never made, he envisaged a metal-plated wooden structure on wheels, with canons around the edge and slits to allow soldiers to shoot their weapons from inside.


“This is a beautiful example of the innovative way Leonardo used his technical drawings. They are much more powerful than those of his contemporaries. He represents how the tank would move over the ground with dust and speed,” says Giorgione.


The tank was commissioned by the then Duke of Milan, Ludovico Sforza, who had been charged with defending the city from invasion. “It’s one of da Vinci’s many, many hundreds of drawings of military engineering. It was a profession and a salary, so it was a very important starting point for his career here in Milan,” says Giorgione.


Intriguingly, the original design included a major defect: the front and rear wheels were geared to turn in opposite directions. If built as drawn, the vehicle would never have worked. Given the polymath’s pacifist views and clear understanding of mechanical forces, some historians believe this was no mistake, but an act of deliberate sabotage.


The metallic man


Over 500 years before C-3PO and the invention of artificial intelligence or computers, da Vinci created the ‘robotic knight’, a humanoid robot able to wave its arms, sit down and even open and close its mouth. 


By studying the anatomy of human corpses, da Vinci taught himself how muscles and joints work together to move bones. His mechanical doll was designed to mimic these processes using a system of pulleys, gears and cables operated by a hand crank.


Da Vinci’s robots were mostly for the entertainment of his wealthier patrons, such as the automatic lion he invented for the king of France. The knight was mostly used for theatrical displays at parties thrown by Sforza.


“His work with special effects is one of the few moments where his studies in engineering were really known to his contemporaries. Most of these drawings were kept in his private diaries,” says Giorgione.  


Little did da Vinci know, later his designs would be resurrected and incorporated into Nasa’s Anthrobot, a highly dexterous, anatomically correct robot hand currently used to carry out tasks requiring nimble fingers on Mars.


Taking flight


After a memorable encounter with a kite as a child, da Vinci’s greatest ambition was to fly. He dedicated hundreds of journal entries to avian anatomy, buying birds in the marketplace to study their wings. When he was done he’d set them free (he was a vegetarian).


Eventually da Vinci came up with the ‘ornithopter’: an eccentric flapping machine inspired by birds and bats. Measuring 33 ft-long (10m) it would have been made from pinewood covered in pure silk. Since he knew humans are too heavy – and scrawny – to power flight with wings attached to our arms, the craft required a reclining pilot to power the wings with their legs. Alas, da Vinci eventually worked out that even then we wouldn’t be able to generate enough lift.


Da Vinci likely never made it off the ground, but Leonardo davincii– a species of moth discovered in 1965 – can be foundfluttering around Sudan to this day.


A driven mind


Although cars didn’t make it onto the roads until the late 19th Century, our Renaissance hero arguably got close several hundreds of years earlier, when he was just 26 years old. Leonardo’s open-top three-wheeler was essentially a giant wind-up toy, powered by coiled springs which could be wound up by rotating the wheels.


Incredibly, “Leonardo’s Fiat” was also driverless. The steering could be programmed in advance by angling a series of blocks set among the gears. When it was finally built in 2004 there was just one crucial difference to modern cars: his started up perfectly the first time.


However, it’s unlikely da Vinci ever intended his vehicle for the roads. “This idea of making his ideas contemporary, like portraying the cart as the ancestor of the car, was Mussolini’s.  He was concerned with portraying the superiority of the Italian genius, but it’s false,” says Giorgione. In fact the car was probably another theatrical invention, since it could only travel about 40 metres.


Mechanical mathematician


The sketch for this mysterious instrument wasn’t rediscovered until 1965, when a linguistics professor working in the National Library of Spain stumbled upon two collections of manuscripts bound in Moroccan leather.


The 700-odd pages contained da Vinci’s notes on architecture, geometry, music, mechanics, navigation and maps. Hidden away in the middle was a sketch of a machine with 13 interlocking wheels and 10 faces numbered from zero to nine. It’s not known exactly how the machine would work, but it’s thought it may be the world’s first analogue calculator.


“They weren’t really projects to actually be built; his drawings are difficult to interpret and they were often lacking in details. They were just dreams. He had no time or money to realise them,” says Giorgione.


Historical helicopter


Long before engines, Perspex windows or strong-but-light aluminium alloys, this vertical take-off flying machine was truly ahead of its time.  Made of stretched linen “sails” and wooden masts, it may be more reminiscent of a circular sailing ship than a modern helicopter, but the invention demonstrates da Vinci’s grasp of physical laws which wouldn’t be formally discovered for centuries.


“This is an incredible drawing, unique from all the others. The drawing is described very carefully by Leonardo with a note talking about how he had made little paper models,” says Giorgione.


The “aerial screw” is thought to have been inspired by watching the spiralling descent of the seeds of the maple tree; with enough rotation, da Vinci hoped the sails would bore upwards into the air. We now know it would never have worked as a flying craft. Instead he had inadvertently invented a precursor to the propeller. “He was aware it was impossible to make this design – in its current form – rotate. He had the first intuition for how propellers can work but he could not develop the idea,” says Giorgione.


With long-lost sketches turning up as late as 1966 – and the discovery of one of his paintings in 2011 – there may be more inventions out there somewhere. Who knows, he may have thought up something we haven’t invented yet.


/By BBC/

URL: http://www.today.az/news/interesting/152990.html

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